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No-Confidence Vote, Appeals Court Ruling Are Two Strikes Against Administration
With no one but George Bush and Joe Lieberman in his corner, it must be a drag for Attorney General Alberto Gonzales to get up and go to work every morning. The Justice Department insists that Gonzales couldn't care less that a majority of the U.S. Senate favored a historic no-confidence vote against him--the first of its kind against a cabinet member. The Attorney General is far too focused on Internet sex predators and terrorists who threaten our cities to notice a little thing like whether his colleagues in Washington think he should resign in disgrace. The Republicans managed to block the resolution (the vote was 53 to 38, seven shy of the 60 votes needed to proceed), with Lieberman joining the yellow-dog Republican side. Even the Republicans who voted to block the measure (seven voted for it) have harshly criticized Gonzales. Like Bush they see the resolution as "wasting time" and "political." Of course, it is the politicization of the Justice Department that is at issue here. Hearings continue on the flagrantly political firings of U.S. attorneys who failed to toe the Bush line.
Now that No Confidence is over, why not try another tack: impeachment? Gonzales, after all, is behind not only Republican hackery at Justice, but a whole range of despicable Bush actions, including concocting the theory that OKs the use of torture against loosely defined "enemy combatants," and the Military Commissions Act, which denies people so-named the basic right of habeas corpus.
The Military Commissions Act is the subject of another bit of bad news for the Administration this week: the federal appeals court in Richmond, Virginia, just ruled that the Administration may not continue its policy of indefinite detention of civilians. "To sanction such presidential authority to order the military to seize and indefinitely detain civilians, even if the President calls them 'enemy combatants,' would have disastrous consequences for the Constitution--and the country," one of the judges in the case, Diana Gribbon Motz, wrote for the court. In other words, Bush and Gonzales cannot continue to overreach.
They will argue otherwise--all the way up to the Supreme Court. Yesterday, Justice released a statement declaring the plaintiff in the appeals court case, Ali al-Marri, a grave threat to the United States. He may well be. (Since he was already in custody on separate, criminal charges, it's unclear why this justifies holding him in a military brig.) The real trouble is, Gonzales and Bush have no credibility. They have lied, repeatedly, to justify their illegal, political, and unconstitutional acts. They have detained the innocent along with the guilty. They have blocked the accused access to lawyers, and the public access to records, that would clarify their policies and practices.
In the al-Marri case there is also the now familiar allegation of torture, justified in Gonzales's infamous "torture memo."
"The President cannot eliminate Constitutional protections with the stroke of a pen," Judge Motz wrote. Time to get rid of the pen, and the lawyer who holds it for the President.
Ruth Conniff covers national politics for The Progressive and is a voice of The Progressive on many TV and radio programs.
© 2007 The Progressive



6 Comments so far
Show AllYes, the "no-confidence" vote was a complete waste of time because it was non-binding. I agree with the Republicans who said the Democrats may be in need of a civics lesson. In the U.S. the proper procedure is impeachment, not a no-confidence vote.
If the Dems can't even get it together enough to impeach Gonzales, then I'm voting for the Greens in 2008. I've had it. Enough is enough. Feckin appeasers.
With global warming approaching the tipping point and Cheney hell-bent on making war with Iran, there is no time to lose.
IMPEACH NOW
This should be the first priority of every member of Congress right now.
Even if impeachment doesn't succeed, at least we'll know who's worthy of re-election (hint to Congress: if you don't co-sponsor H.R. 333, you needn't apply).
I wonder...does Joe Lieberman ever get tired of kissing George Bu$h's butt? You would think his lips would be cramped by now!!!
Oh, and Cark Kent...I ain't gonna happen. I wish with all my heart that Congress would impeach everybody in the Bu$h administration, then turn them over to the courts to lock them away for the rest of time, but they don't even have the cajones to stop funding of this criminal war, despite the fact that 70+% of the nation's population wants it and voted them into office for this very reason. I mean after all, they do run the very real risk of being called unpatriotic by the preznit himself.
It might have been interesting to see a confidence vote in Gonzales, I would like to see the number of those who would vote that they have Confidence in him.
Of course, by now Alberto the blank can't recall why everybody seems so upset with him. How does he find the office?
Our small town paper ran a poll: Should Gonzales go or not? Even after all the obvious blunders and lies, the count was 46.5 for keeping him, 46.3 for getting rid of him.
Sometimes I hate living in a red county. What would a person have to do for neocons to consider him a failure?
Opinionated: to them morality occurs mostly below the belt, thus illicit sex with a person of the same gender or in a position they deem inappropriate (or inter-racial with a leader) would probably fit THEIR narrow bill of what constitutes immoral impeachable offenses. Nothing like that Puritan legacy that's wound its way so effectively into fundamentalist teachings, giving rise to a whole new generation, millions strong of the new authoritarians. Read all about them (and realize what KIND of nation they'd like Amerika to become, under the mantra of freedom, slogan, like every other PR verbal configuration Bush & co are known for) in John Dean's book, "Conservatives without Conscience." He nailed it... and there's no truth like that brought forward by someone who lived inside the same tent!
Dear Sir: Joe Libermen is not a democrat. He needs to resign to become a republican. Bush needs to be censured