MOTHER JONES BY E-MAIL

Patience for Privilege Wearing Thin

Washington Dispatch: House Democrats have filed contempt charges after weeks spent battling claims of executive privilege from Bolton and Miers. Next step? Shackles.

July 26, 2007


TOOLS

EmailE-mail article
PrintPrint article




BACKTALK

E-mail the editor





Google


On Wednesday, the House Judiciary Committee voted 22-17 along party lines to refer to the full chamber a report that recommends holding former White House Counsel Harriet Miers and White House Chief of Staff Josh Bolten in statutory contempt of Congress. Citing the Bush administration's assertion of executive privilege, Miers and Bolten have ignored House subpoenas concerning their role in the firing of nine U.S. Attorneys last December.

Laying the groundwork for Wednesday's action has been a long and complicated process for House Democratic leaders. To avoid a possible loss in the courts as well as charges of partisanship, they have spent weeks establishing a pattern of White House obstructionism, built a detailed legal argument against the assertions of executive privilege on this issue, and structured a narrow case based upon the flouting of committee subpoenas. If the contempt charge passes the House, the case will be referred to Jeff Taylor, the U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C., who was appointed by Bush.

On Tuesday, Chairman John Conyers (D-MI) circulated a 52-page memo to all members of the House Judiciary Committee. Intended to serve as a compendium of the offenses that warrant the subpoenas, the memo details just about every facet of the scandal: It includes the apparent motives for the attorney firings, the seemingly false statements White House and Justice Department officials have made about the case, and legal arguments against the executive privilege the president has cited as justification for blocking the investigation from moving forward.

It remains unclear how far Congress can proceed in the long term. A July 25 Associated Press article indicated that the House will likely wait until after Congress' August recess to rule on the contempt citations. If they eventually pass the citations, it would be up to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) to refer the case to Taylor. The administration has insisted that Congress cannot force the U.S. Attorney's office to pursue contempt charges, and Taylor, like all U.S. Attorneys, serves at the pleasure of the president.

But Democrats argue that if they don't pursue contempt proceedings against Bolten and Miers, they'll create a perverse set of incentives for future presidents to block Congressional oversight. Republicans responded that a loss in court might actually make that situation worse. "Our failure is not here," said Rep. Chris Cannon (R-UT) at the hearing. "You have the votes here. If we fail in the courts…that's when we make the imperial presidency."

Several Democrats responded that a worse incentive is created when the president believes that Congress will not vigorously attend to its oversight duties. "Some may argue that the stakes in this confrontation are so high we cannot afford the risk that we might lose," said Conyers, "I would say to them that if we countenance a process where our subpoenas can be readily ignored, where a witness under a duly authorized subpoena doesn't even bother to show up, where privilege can be asserted on the thinnest of bases and in the broadest possible manner, then we have already lost."

Other Republicans advanced a less technical argument against the citations. Rep. Ric Keller (R-FL) suggested that the Judiciary Committee accept an offer of an off-the-record, closed-door meeting with White House officials in lieu of escalating the Constitutional crisis.

"There has been no attempt to gather this information through alternative means," Keller said. "For example, the White House has made Harriet Miers available to talk about any communications that she had with DOJ officials, members of Congress or outside sources on an informal basis. They've turned down that interview opportunity. Similarly they're seeking the documents for Josh Bolten. Josh Bolten said, ‘I will provide you with any documents regarding this situation between the White House and DOJ as well as any documents between the White House and Congress or other third parties.'They've turned down that…as well."

Though no Democrat at the hearing specifically questioned his assertions on this point, Keller ignored the fact that the president's offer is contingent upon a host of restrictions, including a refusal to provide the committee with any internal White House correspondence and a refusal to participate at all thereafter. Conyers addressed those restrictions in the 52-page memo.

"On March 20, 2007, White House Counsel made a ‘take it or leave it'proposal, under which the Committee was offered limited availability to some documents and limited access to witnesses, but without any transcripts and under severe limitations as to permissible areas for questioning," the memo read. "The White House also insisted that a condition of its proposal was that the Committee commit in advance not to subsequently pursue any additional White House-related information by any other means, regardless of what initial review of documents and informal discussions should reveal."

If the court does not overrule the executive privilege claims and hold Miers and Bolten in contempt—or if it refuses to hear the citation in the first place—House Democrats will face some difficult choices. One option would be to pursue citations of inherent—as opposed to statutory—contempt of Congress, and try Bolten and Miers before the full House of Representatives. That would require dispatching the House Sergeant-at-Arms to arrest the pair and holding them in jail, an option House aides have suggested Democrats have little appetite for. Failing that, they could begin impeachment proceedings against the president himself, or any Senate-approved appointee involved in the obstruction. Or they could do nothing at all. If that happens, it may well end the congressional inquiry into the U.S. Attorney scandal forever.

Brian Beutler is the Washington correspondent for the Media Consortium, a network of progressive media organizations, including Mother Jones.



 

Post a Comment

Your Name: 

Your Comment: 
 
Please press "Submit" only once to avoid double-posting.
All HTML formatting is removed from comments.
Read the Mother Jones community rules here.

Comments:

It is indeed the imperial presidency of George Bush. This obstruction cannot be allowed to happen unchecked or Rome will fall.
Posted by:Emanuel GlantzJuly 27, 2007 7:35:31 AMRespond ^
Sure the republicans want a behind closed door, off the record. So the lies and denials can keep flowing.
Posted by:NickJuly 27, 2007 12:13:32 PMRespond ^
But wait. A statutory contempt citation is doomed to fail because Bush forbade Jeff Taylor from pursuing any such case and the DoJ (no conflict of interest here of course) declared that the executive privilege claims of Bolten and Miers are valid. Check. Your move. If Congress does not send the Sergeant at Arms to drag these bozos before Congress, it is checkmate for the republic. You can bet Karl Rasputin has a plan and it doesn't include appearing before no stinking Senate Judicial Committee. That fat bastard is laughing up his sleeve.
Posted by:PJ WhiteJuly 27, 2007 9:22:39 PMRespond ^
The three branches of government are supposed to be co-equal to each other, and the founding fathers of this country wanted it like this to avoid exactly this type of situation. I guess King George and his neo-con buddies installed right wing Christian idiots into every part of this government making it nearly impossible to have the checks and balances that are supposed to protect the country and its Constitution. I suppose King George and his buddies must of received a deferment on the day there teachers reviewed this in middle school. Not only did he miss that day in school but he also missed the entire Vietnam war.
Posted by:A.J.R.July 28, 2007 4:52:04 AMRespond ^
Call me a cynic if you will. I don't think there are enough principled politicians in congress with the political courage to follow this through to a meaningful conclusion. Bush doesn't face the electorate again, they do. Who among them has the fortitude to take the risk?
Posted by:Mark GawryJuly 28, 2007 2:18:19 PMRespond ^
If I have heard of inherent contempt of congress, why hasn't congress? They could hear the case in the House, arrest Miers and Bolten and place them in jail prior to the hearings. It appears absurd that the Congress does not use the tools they have to beat the president. Failure to stop the war by using the power of the purse, failing to use inherent contempt and other tools at their disposal makes them look like they are "acting" weak. However, it appears as if they too are obligated to some lobbyist or to Bush. No wonder their poll numbers are low.It is a shame there is not a legitimate third party that looks out for the people.
Posted by:Vicki LawsonAugust 1, 2007 7:50:25 AMRespond ^
The D's will do nothing. They're just hoping that if they're quiet and meek enough, they won't wind up in a Halliburton prison camp after the R's lose the election and Rove declares the Empire to avoid leaving office. Sad part is, it won't work.
Posted by:stormkiteAugust 1, 2007 12:19:56 PMRespond ^
It is time. The republic is gone. We must undertake a constitutional convention for the purposes of re-ratifying the Constitution. As a political task it will border on the impossible but do we have any alternatives? Almost every person in government today has a vested interest in the status quo. No individual or group is going to change things. It will require the gigantic upheaval of re-ratification. Re-ratification will require a new executive, an entirely new Senate and House, a new judiciary from top to bottom. Every federal law, rule, regulation and tax is gone. We will be starting fresh, like hitting the reset button on your computer. I don't believe all of the proposed reform is anything but hot air and a cover for keeping things, at the basic level, exactly as they are now. I believe re-ratification will be the end of the madness we are witness to.
Posted by:Frank GillespieAugust 6, 2007 7:54:52 AMRespond ^
So, what? We just let this president destroy the constitutional requirement for checks and balances without even trying to stop it? Wake up, people. The courts are already corrupted and will do whatever this president wants. The congress is the only avenue left to at least attempt to save what is left of our democratic process.
Posted by:heartlight3August 9, 2007 8:03:34 PMRespond ^
I am in awe of the hesitancy to initiate and follow-through with legal action against a President who sees himself above the law. Having watched PBS's Bill Moyers Journal about impeaching George W. and Dick Cheney; I lose heart that the Democrats cower at starting such proceedings. As John Nichols, of The Nation, states, "...this is about a lot more than the high crimes and misdemeanors of a regal President and his monarchical Vice President. If Bush and Cheney are not held accountable, this Administration will hand off to its successors a toolbox of powers greater than any executive has ever held...more authority, concentrated in fewer hands than the Founders could have conceived or would have allowed." Our Constitution, and the rights that are defined therein, are at stake. We, as Americans, have GOT to awaken to the dangerous precedent this Administration has set. The sneering of a President who believes himself to be above the law and any consequences for the crimes that he commits. Thus far, he has been successful on both counts. Fear is his greatest weapon against the American people and we have bought into it!
Posted by:Claudia RyanAugust 10, 2007 10:24:09 PMRespond ^
Bravo, Claudia! Couldn't have said it better myself. We should be in the streets rabidly protesting not only the illegal war in Iraq, but Bush's use of fear-mongery to "keep us all in line" and squelch dissent. We are losing our republic to a war-crazed, hegemonic coterie of greedy monsters who rule our rulers. We're just witnessing the crystaliztion of it all. It's a classic recipe for dictatorship: Strike pre-emptively, incite terror, use terror to scare populace into giving up their rights as citizens. SOVEREIGNTY as citizens, in America. We need to organize! Let's get LOUD!
Posted by:Sweet DissidentAugust 11, 2007 10:53:40 PMRespond ^
The mistake Congress keeps making is in thinking that a carefully established legal case makes any difference to a criminal conspiracy which seized power by suspending, circumventing, or breaking the laws of this country. Obviously, if US Attorney Jeff Taylor is just another BushCo toadie (99.9% probable), that will be a dead-end. The Bush/Cheney conspiracy has been actively subverting and dismantling the US Constitution since their 2000 Election swindle, enlisting assistance from paid BushCo operatives sitting on the Supreme Court. So everyone in that camp just chuckles whenever we liberal buffoons get misty-eyed about the future of Democracy, checks and balances, separate branches of government, etc. Three things must happen to deal with the present conspiracy and prevent recurrences: (1) the perpetrators must serve real jail time (no pardons or commuted sentences); (2) all of the money and property acquired by the perps as a result of their crimes must be confiscated and returned to the Treasury; and, (3) those in command of the Conquest of Iraq must face war-crimes charges. Maybe it's not practical to attempt a real impeachment since the Dems have no gonads and the Repubs have no brains. But the entire Bush administration needs to know that there will be warrants for their arrest the minute their terms are up. Every loyal Bushie from George HW Bush (il capo di tutti capi) down to the lowliest aide needs to be given one or more subpoenas and have their financial resources frozen until all legal proceedings have been completed. Likewise, all of the corporations (Halliburton, Blackwater, KBR and all of their subsidiaries)which conspired with this administration to defraud the American public need to be shut down and their assets liquidated to repay their debts. Their corporate leaders will need jail sentences similar to their political partners, preferably 25-Life, and the loss of their ill-gotten personal fortunes. History suggests, however, that just like Nixon, Kissinger, Ronald Reagan, Oliver North, and too many other criminal conspirators, their associations with ultra-wealthy corporate sponsors are brought to bear to buy their way out of their plight.
Posted by:mgloraineAugust 17, 2007 1:41:31 PMRespond ^
Never thot I'd live to watch my country die.
Posted by:John BlandSeptember 25, 2007 1:00:46 AMRespond ^
Yes, but Gays can't get maried and this mess is the fault of Rev Wright.
Posted by:fred SimsMay 27, 2008 11:23:41 AMRespond ^

Jail.org - Inmate Search
Criminal records, instant public records & people search & current court records. www.jail.org

U.S. Public Records Search
Search County & State Court Records, Criminal records, Vital and Adoption Records www.PublicRecordsInfo.com

Records.com - People Search
Public Records and Background Checks. Instantly Search Criminal Records, Addresses and Court Records www.Records.com

Court Records & County Records
Find Instant Public Records, Criminal Records as Well as County Property Records Search. www.PublicRecordsIndex.com
















bookIN PRINT

CLICK HERE
for more great reading

headphones IN TUNE
New music every issue

CLICK TO LISTEN


This article has been made possible by the Foundation for National Progress, the Investigative Fund of Mother Jones, and gifts from generous readers like you.

© 2007 The Foundation for National Progress

About Us   Support Us   Advertise   Ad Policy   Privacy Policy   Contact Us   Subscribe   RSS