WASHINGTON
In the months since Sen. Judd Gregg's surprise withdrawal from his nomination to be President Obama's commerce secretary, the New Hampshire Republican has remade himself into one of the most fervent critics of the administration's budget policies. Obama, he says, has already begun to do more damage to the country's finances than all his predecessors combined.
For Gregg, the decision to withdraw -- and the awkward confessional press conference at which he declared "I couldn't be Judd Gregg and serve in the Cabinet" -- may still be vexing to others, but he no longer wrestles with his identity. Instead, he has uncovered new euphoria for the once low-key life of a fiscal scold.
"I think my influence on these issues has been raised, ironically, because of the Commerce exercise," Gregg said. "I'm not saying anything that's different from what I have always said, but in our culture there's a little bit of notoriety that comes when you get your 15 minutes."
Rather than drum him out, Republicans have put Gregg -- and his seemingly endless collection of line graphs and pie charts predicting budgetary doom -- forward as a spokesman.
He was recently assigned to deliver the party's response to Obama's weekly radio address, and he says that Republican leaders regularly push him to reconsider his decision not to seek reelection next year, though he insists he's ready to retire. Many in the party think Gregg, a 61-year-old former governor and the son of another, offers Republicans their only solid chance to hold on to his Senate seat.
"Conservatives felt good when he was going to be their voice in the administration, but they felt excellent when he said he was not going to sell out his principles," said former New Hampshire Congressman Jeb Bradley. "He wins on both counts from conservatives."
Unlike many of his fellow Republicans, who have resisted personalizing their quarrels with the popular new president, Gregg has been happy to put Obama's face on the disagreement. One recent visual aid Gregg displayed on the Senate floor featured a large version of Obama's formal portrait, juxtaposed unfavorably against the visages of 42 other presidents who Gregg claimed had generated less federal debt combined than the current one will.