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Democratic cave-in on White House testimony in US attorney
firings
By Barry Grey
3 April 2007
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Democratic Senator Charles Schumer of New York, who has been
leading the Senate investigation into the Bush administrations
firing of US attorneys, on Sunday signaled his partys capitulation
to President Bush on obtaining testimony from Karl Rove and other
White House officials involved in the purge.
Last month Bush rejected the request of the judiciary committees
in the House of Representatives and the Senate for White House
aides to appear at hearings and testify under oath about the 2006
dismissal of the eight US attorneys. Both committees, controlled
by the Democrats, then voted to authorize the issuance of subpoenas
to compel Bushs top political adviser Rove, former counsel
to the president Harriet Miers, and others to testify, but did
not actually issue the subpoenas. The White House made it clear
it would defy any subpoenas on the grounds of executive privilege.
Instead, it made the derisory offer to allow Rove and company
to meet behind closed doors with the committees and answer questions
on the condition that the officials not testify under oath and
that there be no transcripts of the sessions. Rather than confront
the administrations assertion of quasi-monarchial privilege
and assert the constitutionally mandated power of congressional
oversight, the Democrats have, predictably, demonstrated once
again their cowardice and indifference to democratic principles
by offering a compromise on Bushs terms.
Schumer used his appearance on the CBS television program Face
the Nation to announce the cave-in. In response to the initial
question from moderator Bob Schieffer, who asked whether Schumer
believed Attorney General Alberto Gonzales had lied about his
involvement in the firings, Schumer demurred, saying, Those
are strong terms.
Then he changed the subject, declaring, theres
a real basis for an agreement here, which is to have Rove, Miers,
other White House people come in with a transcriptyou have
to have a transcriptbut privately at first, and we can reserve
judgment as to whether we meet them publicly afterward. As for
the oath, I think its better to have an oath, but, as many
have pointed out, there are statutes that say you have to tell
the truth anyway. And this is along the lines of what Senator
Specter has proposed . . .
Schumers fellow guest on the program, Arlen Specter,
the ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, interjected
blandly, I proposed that two weeks ago, and went on
to say, I think that Chuck Schumer and I may have come to
an agreement here.
Schumer reiterated his call for Gonzales to resign, a demand
that has been taken up by a number of legislators, Republicans
as well as Democrats. The attorney generals claims to have
known little about the plans, two years in the making, to fire
the US attorneys have been exposed as lies.
He is scheduled to appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee
on April 17 and his fate remains in doubt. While Bush has defended
Gonzales in public, he has reportedly been less supportive in
private discussions with congressional Republicans. Schumers
climb-down on obtaining testimony from White House aides suggests
an implicit offer to make Gonzales the fall guy and let Rove and
other Bush aides off the hook.
Bushs senior counselor Dan Bartlett, who followed Schumer
and Specter on the Face the Nation broadcast, was
coy about Schumers proposal. Without accepting or rejecting
it, he said he had not yet heard from the chairman of the Judiciary
Committee, Senator Patrick Leahy (Democrat of Vermont).
Schumers offer is a capitulation to the Bush White Houses
assertion of virtually unchecked powers. It also serves to keep
the American people in the dark about the administrations
drive to destroy any independence of federal prosecutors and utilize
the US attorney system to suppress working class and minority
voting rights and manipulate elections by means of trumped-up
federal voter fraud investigations. The evidence suggests
that Rove is the main architect of this political conspiracy,
and that it is directed in particular at maintaining Republican
control of the White House in the 2008 elections.
That this was a central motive in the firing of the eight prosecutors
has become abundantly clear. One of the purged prosecutors, John
McKay of Seattle, had refused to launch a phony voter fraud case
against the Democrats following a narrow Democratic victory in
the 2004 gubernatorial election in Washington State. Another,
David Iglesias of New Mexico, had defied pressure from Karl Rove
and Republican legislators to indict local Democrats in the run-up
to the 2006 congressional election in order to ensure the reelection
of Republican Congresswoman Heather Wilson.
The effort to essentially fix the 2008 elections is also revealed
in the individuals chosen by Attorney General Gonzalesa
loyal aide to Bush going back to the presidents stint as
governor of Texasto fill US attorney vacancies, both those
created by the retirement of prosecutors and those opened up by
the purge. One of the fired prosecutors, Bud Cummins of Arkansas,
was replaced by a Rove aide, Tim Griffin. Not accidentally, Arkansas
is where the putative front-runner for the Democratic presidential
nomination, Hillary Clinton, spent most of her adult life.
Bradley J. Schlozman was installed a year ago as US attorney
in Missouri. As a deputy in the Justice Departments civil
rights division, he had overruled career government lawyers in
approving a Texas redistricting plan pushed by Tom DeLay, then
House majority leader. He also approved, over the objections of
Justice Department civil rights lawyers, a Georgia law requiring
voters to show an official photo IDa plan designed to disenfranchise
poor and minority voters.
Schlozman also was involved in filing amicus briefs in the
battleground states of Florida, Michigan and Ohio in 2004, seeking
to prevent the counting of provisional ballots in the presidential
election.
Six days before last Novembers election, Schlozman announced
indictments of four voter-registration recruiters for a liberal
group, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now,
or ACORN, for allegedly submitting fraudulent registrations to
the election board in Kansas City.
Other Republican operatives with little litigation experience
have been placed in US attorney positions in states likely to
be vital in the 2008 election, such as Florida, Iowa and Minnesota.
An April 1 article in the Washington Post, headlined,
Prosecutor Posts Go to Bush Insiders, reported, About
one-third of the nearly four dozen US attorneys jobs that
have changed hands since President Bush began his second term
have been filled by the White House and Justice Department with
trusted administration insiders...
No other administration in contemporary times has had
such a clear pattern of filling chief prosecutors jobs with
its own staff members, said experts on US attorneys offices.
Those experts said the emphasis in appointments traditionally
has been on local roots and deference to home-state senators,
whose support has been critical to win confirmation of the nominees.
The pattern from Bushs second terms suggests that
the dismissal were half of a two-pronged approach: While getting
rid of prosecutors who did not adhere closely to administration
priorities, such as rigorous enforcement of immigration violations
and GOP allegations of voter fraud, White House and Justice officials
have also seeded federal prosecutors offices with people
on whom they can depend to carry out the administrations
agenda.
In 2006, the administration inserted a provision in the revised
USA Patriot Act giving the attorney general the power to appoint
interim US attorneys, with indefinite terms, without obtaining
Senate confirmation. Some of the firings and new appointments
were carried out under this provision, which was undoubtedly enacted
with a view to the 2008 elections.
Not only have the Democrats signaled their readiness to forego
any public or sworn testimony by Bush aides, they have refused
to alert the American people to the extent of the criminality
and anti-democratic conspiracies underlying the purge of the prosecutors.
In both the public hearings that have been held on the matter,
and in the dozens of television appearances by leading Democrats
since the scandal broke last January, the issue has been deliberately
presented in the most superficial and narrow manner, as though
it were merely a matter of partisan politics.
Among those who appeared on the Sunday talk shows over the
weekend was Senate Judiciary Chairman Leahy, who never broached
the connection between the firings and the efforts to intimidate
and harass likely Democratic voters and launch prosecutions to
manipulate elections.
Nor can it be said that this cowardice and complicity are motivated
by deference to popular sentiment. Quite the opposite. George
W. Bush is arguably the most hated and despised president in the
post-war history of the United States. He and his policies of
war and social reaction were repudiated by the electorate in November,
and his favorable ratings in the opinion polls are struggling
to reach the 30 percent mark. Indeed, a recent poll showed that
a substantial majority of the population believes Rove and other
White House aides should be compelled to testify in public and
under oath about the attorney firings.
In an extraordinary op-ed column published in the Washington
Post on March 26, entitled A President All Alone,
the right-wing Republican columnist Robert Novak wrote of the
stark political isolation of Bush, even within his own party.
Last week, as Alberto Gonzales came under withering Democratic
fire, Novak wrote, there were no public GOP declarations
of support amid private predictions of the attorney generals
demise...
But this is less a Gonzales problem than a Bush problem.
With nearly two years remaining in his presidency, George W. Bush
is alone. In half a century, I have not seen a president so isolated
from his own party in Congressnot Jimmy Carter, not even
Richard Nixon as he faced impeachment.
Moreover, Schumers capitulation came three days after
Gonzales former chief of staff, Kyle Sampson, who resigned
on March 12, testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee and
flatly contradicted Gonzales claims to have had no significant
role in the purge of federal prosecutors. Sampson also made clear
that Rove, Miers and other White House aides played a central
role in organizing the firings.
As always, the spinelessness of the Democrats stands in stark
contrast to the political ruthlessness of their Republican counterparts.
One need only recall the Republicans relentless drive to
destabilize and topple the Clinton administration by means of
the Kenneth Starr witch-hunt, culminating in the first-ever impeachment
of an elected president. And the pretext for that attempted coup
was a sex scandal that had nothing to do with the policies or
official actions of the White House. It was carried out, moreover,
in the teeth of overwhelming popular opposition to Starr and the
Republican inquisition.
As in the Clinton impeachment, the theft of the 2000 election,
the 9/11 cover-up, the lies used to drag the country into the
Iraq war, and the countless crimes committed in the name of the
war on terror, the Democrats seek in the US attorney
scandal to conceal the gravity of the threat to the democratic
rights from the American people. They thereby act not as opponents
of these conspiracies, but rather as accomplices.
The Democrats launched their investigation primarily to provide
themselves with political cover following the popular repudiation
of the war and the Bush administration in the November election.
They hoped to use it as a diversion from the catastrophe in Iraq
and their own complicity in that criminal enterprise. But as soon
as the scandal began to reveal the scale of the administrations
anti-democratic operations, they sought to contain it, in order
to effect yet another cover-up.
Whatever their electoral calculations, the Democrats fear a
further weakening, if not outright collapse, of the Bush administration,
because of the dire implications of such a development for the
foreign and domestic interests of the American financial oligarchy,
whose basic interests both they and the Republicans defend. The
last thing the Democrats desire is to provide a rallying point
for massive popular discontent to assume political forms outside
the capitalist two-party system.
See Also:
Ex-aide contradicts Attorney
General Gonzales on US attorney firings
[30 March 2007]
The anti-democratic agenda behind
the US attorney firings
[29 March 2007]
New documents expose White
House, Justice Department lies in firing of US attorneys
[26 March 2007]
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