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After resignation of Gonzales deputy
Bush Justice Department cover-up unraveling
By Patrick Martin
16 May 2007
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The resignation of deputy attorney general Paul J. McNulty
Monday is another blow to the Bush administrations efforts
to maintain the cover-up of the circumstances behind the firing
of eight US attorneys and the forced resignations of several others.
The resignation came only hours after the Washington Post
reported new evidence that the US attorneys were fired as part
of a deliberate campaign by Republican political operatives to
instigate phony vote fraud prosecutions and intimidate
Democratic voters.
While McNulty made the politically obligatory claim that he
was leaving his position after only 18 months on the job because
of the financial realities of putting his children
through college, there is no doubt that his departure is directly
connected to the mushrooming scandal over the firing of the federal
prosecutors, and the ensuing finger-pointing within top administration
circles.
With his departure, every top Justice official directly involved
in the firings last December has left the department, with the
exception of their ultimate boss, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales.
McNulty ran the day-to-day operations of the department and participated,
along with Gonzales, in the December 8 meeting that ratified the
list of seven prosecutors to be dismissed (an eighth was removed
earlier).
His resignation follows the ouster of Kyle Sampson, Gonzales
chief of staff, who drew up the list to be fired; Monica Goodling,
Gonzales counselor, a 31-year-old Christian fundamentalist
who served as the main liaison between Gonzales and the White
House; and Michael Battle, the Justice Department official who
worked as the direct supervisor of the 93 US attorneys and actually
carried out the firings. According to a confidential memorandum
leaked to the press last week, Gonzales delegated his hire-and-fire
authority for most political appointees to Sampson and Goodling,
both young and inexperienced in legal affairs, but well connected
in right-wing Republican circles.
The next step in the investigation is likely to be congressional
testimony by Goodling, who had refused to answer any questions,
citing her Fifth Amendment right to avoid self-incrimination.
The House Judiciary Committee approved a grant of immunity, with
the support of 32 of the 40 members, an indication of widespread
disaffection with Gonzales even among congressional Republicans.
A federal judge ratified the grant of immunity May 11, and Goodling
is expected to testify before the Memorial Day recess.
Democratic congressional leaders have focused attention largely
on the actions taken by Justice Department officials in carrying
out the firings, including conflicting and obviously false statements,
rather than exploring the actual political purpose of the purge.
This is in part due to the systematic refusal of Gonzales and
other officials to admit the US attorneys were dismissed for political
reasons. But it also reflects Democrats fear of raising
fundamental issues of democratic rights that might spark much
broader public interest in the scandal. Most press coverage has
followed suit.
The Washington Post article published Monday, under
the headline, Voter-Fraud Complaints by GOP Drove Dismissals,
is an exception to that pattern. The articlenot placed on
page one, despite its explosive political thrustbegan, Nearly
half the US attorneys slated for removal by the administration
last year were targets of Republican complaints that they were
lax on voter fraud, including efforts by presidential adviser
Karl Rove to encourage more prosecutions of election-law violations,
according to new documents and interviews.
The article noted that Rove and other officials had targeted
five US attorney districts, all in key battleground states, where
aggressive prosecution of vote-fraud cases, whatever the merits
of the charges, might serve Republican political interests. The
five were Kansas City, Missouri; Milwaukee, Wisconsin; New Mexico;
Nevada; and Washington state. Three of the five US attorneys were
fired and a fourth, Todd Graves of Missouri, was forced to resign.
Only the US attorney in Milwaukee, Steven Biskupic, kept his job,
because he had a powerful Republican patron, Congressman James
Sensenbrenner, then chairman of the House Judiciary Committee.
The Post article notes that state Republican parties
and the White House have pushed aggressively for stricter voter-identification
requirements and other rules restricting access to the franchise
throughout the period since the 2000 presidential election.
Such tactics contributed heavily to depressing the Democratic
vote in Florida, bringing Bush close enough to carrying the state
that the Supreme Court could intervene and tip the election to
the candidate who actually lost it. And they played a role in
Bushs reelection victory in 2004, particularly in Ohio.
Republican operatives hoped to use similar methods to turn anti-Bush
voters away from the polls in the November 2006 congressional
election.
While the issue of failure to prosecute vote-fraud cases was
known to have played a role in the firing of two of the US attorneys,
the Post noted, it was not clear until last week
that Biskupic came close to being fired, that Graves had been
asked to resign or that Justice officials had highlighted Nevada
as a problem area for voter fraud.
The article continued, New information also emerged showing
the extent to which the White House encouraged investigations
of election fraud within weeks of November balloting. Rove, in
particular, was preoccupied with pressing Gonzales and his aides
about alleged voting problems in a handful of battleground states,
according to testimony and documents. Last October, just weeks
before the midterm elections, Roves office sent a 26-page
packet to Gonzaless office containing precinct-level voting
data about Milwaukee.
As it happened, no immediate action was taken, at least in
part because of Justice Department rules barring the public launching
of cases just before an election that might have an effect on
its outcomewhich clearly was the purpose of Roves
intervention. But only a month after the Republican electoral
debacle, the politically-suspect US attorneys were purged en
masse.
Deputy attorney general McNulty served as a right-wing legal
thug for two decades, including chief counsel and communications
director for the House impeachment proceedings against President
Bill Clinton, then chief advocate for the confirmation of John
Ashcroft as attorney general in 2001. Ashcroft then appointed
him US attorney for the eastern district of Virginia, where he
handled the high-profile prosecutions of John Walker Lindh and
Zaccarias Moussaoui, before being promoted to the number two spot
in the Justice Department.
That even such a figure should run afoul of the White House
is an indication of the insularity of the clique running the Bush
administration.
McNulty is blamed for having inadvertently instigated a political
firestorm around the firings when he told a congressional committee
in February that the dismissed US attorneys had been removed for
performance issues, suggesting they were fired for
incompetence. This comment provoked the fired prosecutors, who
had largely remained silent, to begin speaking out, triggering
extensive media coverage and further congressional hearings.
The deputy attorney general particularly angered the White
House when he admitted that the US attorney for Little Rock, Arkansas
had been removed, not for performance, but because Karl Rove wanted
to fill the post with a political crony.
Now that he has chosen to leave, the Bush administration has
lost not a moment in seeking to scapegoat McNulty for the firings.
Within hours, Gonzales was telling reporters that McNulty had
the main role in selecting those to be discharged. This followed
weeks in which Gonzales has claimedrepeatedly and under
oaththat he could not remember who had drawn up the list
for the purge, except that he was sure it was not Bush, Cheney
or Rove!
According to the transcript of his comments Monday, Gonzales
now says, you have to remember at the end of the day, the
recommendations reflected the views of the Deputy Attorney General.
He signed off on the names, and he would know better than anyone
else, anyone else in this room. Again, the Deputy Attorney General
would know best about the qualifications and experiences of the
mindsits a communityand he signed off on the
names.
At a May 10 hearing before the House Judiciary Committee, Gonzales
testified under oath that he had no idea who selected the names
on the list submitted to him by his chief of staff Kyle Sampson.
This stance provoked a question from committee chairman John
Conyers of Detroit: Tell me, just tell me how the US attorney
termination list came to be and who suggested putting most of
these US attorneys on the list and why? Now, that should take
about three sentences.
Gonzales replied that Sampson presented to me what I
understood to be the consensus recommendation of the departments
senior leadership, but refused to name a single name.
Only four days later, however, Gonzales announced to the world
McNulty made me do it, after his deputy submitted
his resignation.
See Also:
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]
Will White House sacrifice
Gonzales to save Rove?
[17 April 2007]
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