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Gonzales aide stonewalls on White House role in firing of
US attorneys
By Patrick Martin
24 May 2007
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The former Justice Department liaison with the White House
testified under oath before a congressional committee Wednesday
and denied ever having discussed the firings of eight US attorneys
with then White House counsel Harriet Miers or Bushs top
political aide Karl Rove.
Monica Goodling, who quit the department last month as the
political backlash mounted from the firing of the eight attorneys,
invoked her Fifth Amendment right not to testify after she was
sworn in as a witness before the House Judiciary Committee. Committee
chairman John Conyers, a Democrat from Detroit, then cited a court
ruling allowing him to give Goodling limited immunity from prosecution
for anything she said to the committee, so long as she did not
commit perjury.
Goodlings testimony was inherently implausible and self-contradictory.
While serving as the highest official link between the White House
and the Justice Department, in her capacity as a counselor to
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, she claimed not to have had
a meeting on any subject with the top attorney at the White House,
Miers.
Goodling said she had intervened in Justice Department hiring
and firing decisions based on her right-wing Republican political
loyalties, admitting that she had crossed the line
in violating civil service rules. But she claimed that her politically
motivated actions were not taken at the direction of the top political
operative in the Bush administration, Rove, who was deeply involved
in the selection and dismissal of the US attorneys.
The most glaring contradiction is between Goodlings claim
that she was only a minor figure in the attorney firings and her
decision to take the Fifth Amendment, an extraordinary and unprecedented
action for a leading official in the Department of Justice, the
chief law enforcement agency in the federal government. If she
played no decision-making role in the firings, for what crime
could she fear prosecution?
The 33-year-old Goodling had no prosecutorial experience, only
a law degree from Regent University, the college run by Christian
fundamentalist Pat Robertson, when she was appointed to a public
affairs position at the Justice Department. But she was well-connected
politically, part of a network of hundreds of ultra-right lawyers
in the Federalist Society who have filled positions in the Bush
administration.
Besides minimizing her own responsibility, Goodling also sought
to exonerate Gonzales himself, while focusing blame on the deputy
attorney general, Paul McNulty, who has announced his resignation,
set for later this summer. McNulty seems to have been selected
as the fall guy to contain the mounting scandal over the firing
of the prosecutors.
She placed responsibility for drawing up the list of US attorneys
to be fired on another now-departed official, Gonzaless
chief of staff Kyle Sampson, who resigned in March. Sampson has
said that he merely gathered names suggested by other senior Justice
Department officials and proposed none himself.
Goodling did make one statement tending to implicate Gonzales
in a political cover-up. She testified that Gonzales sought to
review with her his version of the prosecutorial firings story
shortly before she left the Justice Department in March. It
made me a little uncomfortable that he was trying to talk
with her about his recollections, she said. I just did not
know if it was appropriate for us to both be discussing our recollections
of what had happened.
Goodlings statement contradicted Senate testimony delivered
by Gonzales last month when he said that he had not talked
to witnesses because of the fact that I havent wanted to
interfere with this investigation and department investigations.
Democratic Representative Adam Schiff noted that it certainly
has the flavor of trying to get their stories straight.
One thing is clear: since every top Justice Department official
has now testified under oath, including Gonzales himself, that
they did not personally select any of those to be fired and relied
on the recommendations of other top Justice officials, some or
all must be guilty of perjury. The list did not draw itself up.
Goodling admitted to attending the November 27, 2006 meeting
of top Justice officials, including Gonzales and McNulty, which
ratified the decision to fire seven US attorneys. (The eighth
was dismissed in June 2006). But she told the Judiciary Committee,
The truth is I do not know why the seven were selected.
In her testimony against McNulty, Goodling said that the deputy
attorney general had knowingly misled Congress in his testimony
at a hearing in February when he claimed that the White House
had minimal involvement in the purge of US attorneys. I
believe the deputy was not fully candid about his knowledge of
the White Houses involvement, she said.
In particular, she said that McNulty was well aware that Karl
Rove had pressed for the replacement of the US Attorney in Little
Rock, Arkansas, H. E. Cummins, who was replaced by a former Rove
aide and official of the 2004 Bush reelection campaign, Tim Griffin.
McNulty has blamed Goodling and Sampson for his false testimony,
declaring that he based himself on their assurances that the White
House was not concerned in the firings.
Virtually all the questions at the Judiciary Committee hearing
focused on attempting to disentangle the conflicting and contradictory
statements of the Justice Department officials. While committee
Republicans generally solidarized themselves with Gonzales, the
Democrats made no serious effort to shed light on the broader
political meaning of the purge of US attorneys: the systematic
effort by the Bush White House to politicize prosecutorial decision-making
and to use the US attorneys as agents of a Republican voter-suppression
campaign for the 2006 elections.
In the week preceding the hearing, two of the fired attorneys,
John McKay of Seattle, Washington, and David Iglesias of New Mexico,
have publicly charged that the dismissals were part of an illegal
campaign to depress the Democratic vote in the 2006 elections
by bringing bogus corruption and vote-fraud cases against Democratic
politicians and interest groups aligned with the Democratic Party.
In a speech at Loyola College of Los Angeles May 17, McKay
said that the firings of Iglesias and the US Attorney in San Diego,
Carol Lam, were potential obstruction-of-justice cases.
Iglesias was removed for refusing to initiate voter fraud prosecutions
in New Mexico in the run-up to the 2006 elections, while Lam was
fired after she successfully prosecuted one California Republican,
Congressman Randy Cunningham, for bribery, and had begun investigations
into two other Republican congressmen.
Citing published reports about email traffic between the White
House and the Justice Department at the time of Ms. Lams
firing, McKay said, That is powerful circumstantial evidence
of a crime ... I believe we will see a criminal investigation.
McKay said that he himself had been pressured to investigate
the narrow victory of Democrat Christine Gregoire in the 2004
Washington gubernatorial election. My job is to look at
the evidence, and frankly, there wasnt any evidence of a
crime, in Gregoires 129-vote victory, he said.
He added that it was incomprehensible that attorney
general Gonzales claimed he did not know why eight of the 93 prosecutors
were fired. Hes either not telling the truth and covering
something up, or hes incompetent, McKay said. The
disrespect to the rule of law here is so obvious
In interviews with the Los Angeles Times and the Washington
Post, Iglesias described how a top Republican lawyer in New
Mexico invited him to a luncheon meeting to pressure him to initiate
vote-fraud prosecutions against Democrats, although he had concluded
that there was no solid evidence to back such charges. I
believe the primary reason for my forced resignation is that I
was not engaged in filing criminal complaints ... in advance of
the 06 election, Iglesias told the newspapers.
According to emails released to congressional investigators,
the New Mexico Republican lawyer, David Rogers, had complained
about Iglesias to the Justice Department, and the matter was referred
to Goodling and a White House aide to Rove. Rogers and another
New Mexico Republican lawyer met with Matthew Friedrich, a senior
counselor to attorney general Gonzales, and demanded the ouster
of Iglesias.
New Mexicos Republican US Senator Pete V. Domenici was
also involved in pressuring the Justice Department and the Rove
to fire Iglesias. The former US attorney told the Times
that in his opinion, all roads lead to Rove.
The Washington Post also reported that the Justice Department
had considered firing as many as 30 prosecutors as part of the
political purge, before narrowing the list down to nineone
pressured to resign in February 2006, one fired in June, and the
seven in December.
In an editorial May 21, the New York Times spelled out
the political implications of the purge. It is now clear
that United States attorneys were pressured to act in the interests
of the Republican Party, and lost their job if they failed to
do so, the newspaper wrote. The firing offenses of
the nine prosecutors who were purged last year were that they
would not indict Democrats, they investigated important Republicans,
or they would not try to suppress the votes of Democratic-leaning
groups with baseless election fraud cases. It is hard not to see
the fingerprints of Karl Rove. A disproportionate number of the
prosecutors pushed out, or considered for dismissal, were in swing
states. The main reason for the purgeapart from hobbling
a California investigation that has already put one Republican
congressman in jailappears to have been an attempt to tip
states like Missouri and Washington to Republican candidates for
House, Senate, governor and president.
Despite the staggering implications of this case for democratic
rights and the right to votethe campaign outlined by the
Times would be ample grounds for impeachment of all those
concerned, as well as criminal prosecutionthe congressional
Democrats are seeking to confine their investigation to pressuring
for the resignation of Gonzales, a step that they would gladly
accept as marking an end to the affair.
See Also:
After resignation of Gonzales deputy:
Bush Justice Department cover-up unraveling
[16 May 2007]
Top Justice Department aide to testify
in probe of US attorney firings
[10 May 2007]
Gonzalez before the Senate
Judiciary Committee: The Bush clique on life support
[21 April 2007]
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