Jack's posts with tag: itmfa
Well fuck all. The Politico's Mike Allen held an interview with President Bush today in which the Commander-in-Chief announced how he is showing his gratitude to the troops. "I don't want some mom whose son may have recently died to see the commander in chief playing golf... I feel I owe it to the families to be in solidarity as best as I can with them. And I think playing golf during a war just sends the wrong signal." Can't... what the... some game vs. death... [Jonathan Martin]
From: President Bush Gives Up Golf For Iraq
 Well, this is very interesting. From White House Press Secretary Tony Snow:
The executive branch is under no compulsion to testify to Congress, because Congress in fact doesn't have oversight ability.
Cool. I guess we can all go home now and call Bush King. UPDATE:
Forgive the redundancy after having just mentioned this, but it’s worth paying special attention to the new White House talking point.
Tony Snow on ABC: “The executive branch is under no compulsion to testify to Congress, because Congress in fact doesn’t have oversight ability.”
Snow on CBS: “The legislative branch has no oversight responsibility over the White House.”
Snow during press briefing:
“[T]he Congress does have legitimate oversight responsibility for the
Department of Justice. It created the Department of Justice. It does
not have constitutional oversight responsibility over the White House,
which is why by our reaching out, we’re doing something that we’re not
compelled to do by the Constitution, but we think common sense suggests
that we ought to get the whole story out, which is what we’re doing.”
Look, I know these guys are into all kinds of strange ideas about a
unitary executive, but this is ridiculous. If the legislative branch
doesn’t have oversight responsibilities over the White House, does Snow
think the White House has to answer to anyone?
I was struck by Snow’s notion that Congress “created the Department of
Justice.” Historically, I that’s true; the judicial branch was
responsible for establishing cabinet agencies, which lawmakers then
fund and oversee, even though the agencies are part of the executive
branch.
I won’t get into a lengthy, turgid poli sci thesis here, but this
new argument seems to be that the legislative branch may pay the White
House’s bills, but that doesn’t mean it can serve as a check on the
White House’s power. If that’s literally the best the Bush gang can
come up with, they’re in trouble.
Alex, in the last thread, pointed to this helpful report (.pdf) from the Congressional Oversight Manual.
The Constitution grants Congress extensive authority to
oversee and investigate executive branch activities. The constitutional
authority for Congress to conduct oversight stems from such explicit
and implicit provisions as:
1. The power of the purse. The Constitution provides that “No
Money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but in Consequence of
Appropriations made by Law.” Each year the Committees on Appropriations
of the House and Senate review the financial practices and needs of
federal agencies. The appropriations process allows the Congress to
exercise extensive control over the activities of executive agencies.
Congress can define the precise purposes for which money may be spent,
adjust funding levels, and prohibit expenditures for certain purposes.
2. The power to organize the executive branch. Congress has
the authority to create, abolish, reorganize, and fund federal
departments and agencies. It has the authority to assign or reassign
functions to departments and agencies, and grant new forms of authority
and staff to administrators. Congress, in short, exercises ultimate
authority over executive branch organization and generally over policy.
3. The power to make all laws for “carrying into Execution” Congress’s own enumerated powers as well as those of the executive.
Article I grants Congress a wide range of powers, such as the power to
tax and coin money; regulate foreign and interstate commerce; declare
war; provide for the creation and maintenance of armed forces; and
establish post offices. Augmenting these specific powers is the
so-called “Elastic Clause,” which gives Congress the authority “To make
all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into
Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this
Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any
Department or Officer thereof.” Clearly, these provisions grant broad
authority to regulate and oversee departmental activities established
by law.
4. The power to confirm officers of the United States. The
confirmation process not only involves the determination of a nominee’s
suitability for an executive (or judicial) position, but also provides
an opportunity to examine the current policies and programs of an
agency along with those policies and programs that the nominee intends
to pursue.
5. The power of investigation and inquiry. A traditional
method of exercising the oversight function, an implied power, is
through investigations and inquiries into executive branch operations.
Legislators often seek to know how effectively and efficiently programs
are working, how well agency officials are responding to legislative
directives, and how the public perceives the programs. The
investigatory method helps to ensure a more responsible bureaucracy,
while supplying Congress with information needed to formulate new
legislation.
6. Impeachment and removal. Impeachment provides Congress
with a powerful, ultimate oversight tool to investigate alleged
executive and judicial misbehavior, and to eliminate such misbehavior
through the convictions and removal from office of the offending
individuals.
Keep in mind, based on Snow’s comments today, this isn’t the
executive privilege argument, this is the executive privilege argument on crack. The principle of executive privilege, while fluid, addresses a president’s need for candor from advisors. As the president said
the other day, “[I]f the staff of a President operated in constant fear
of being hauled before various committees to discuss internal
deliberations, the President would not receive candid advice, and the
American people would be ill-served.”
But today’s argument goes much further and suggests Congress lacks the authority to ask the White House questions at all.
And given the frequency with which Snow used the argument today, we can
expect to hear quite a bit more about this in the coming days.
I have a hunch this is going to get ugly.
Tonight
on 60 Minutes, Tyler Drumheller, the former chief of the CIA’s Europe
division, revealed that in the fall of 2002, President Bush, Vice
President Cheney, then-National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice and
others were told by CIA Director George Tenet that Iraq’s foreign
minister — who agreed to act as a spy for the United States — had
reported that Iraq had no active weapons of mass destruction program. Watch it:
BRADLEY: According to Drumheller, CIA Director George
Tenet delivered the news about the Iraqi foreign minister at a high
level meeting at the White House.
DRUMHELLER: The President, the Vice President, Dr. Rice…
BRADLEY: And at that meeting…?
DRUMHELLER: They were enthusiastic because they said they were excited that we had a high-level penetration of Iraqis.
BRADLEY: And what did this high level source tell you?
DRUMHELLER: He told us that they had no active weapons of mass destruction program.
BRADLEY: So, in the fall of 2002, before going to war, we had it on
good authority from a source within Saddam’s inner circle that he
didn’t have an active program for weapons of mass destruction?
DRUMHELLER: Yes.
BRADLEY: There’s no doubt in your mind about that?
DRUMHELLER: No doubt in my mind at all.
BRADLEY: It directly contradicts, though, what the President and his staff were telling us.
DRUMHELLER: The policy was set. The war in Iraq was coming, and they
were looking for intelligence to fit into the policy, to justify the
policy.
Read the full transcript HERE.
UPDATE: More at CBS News.
I came across this little gem over the weekend:
Bush Impeachment - The Illinois State Legislature is Preparing to Drop a Bombshell Utilizing a little known rule of the US House to bring Impeachment charges
by Steven Leser
Steven Leser
The Illinois General Assembly is about to rock the nation. Members of state legislatures are normally not considered as having the ability to decide issues with a massive impact to the nation as a whole. Representative Karen A. Yarbrough of Illinois' 7th District is about to shatter that perception forever. Representative Yarbrough stumbled on a little known and never utlitized rule of the US House of Representatives, Section 603 of Jefferson's Manual of the Rules of the United States House of Representatives, which allows federal impeachment proceedings to be initiated by joint resolution of a state legislature. From there, Illinois House Joint Resolution 125 (hereafter to be referred to as HJR0125) was born.
Detailing five specific charges against President Bush including one that is specified to be a felony, the complete text of HJR0125 is copied below at the end of this article. One of the interesting points is that one of the items, the one specified as a felony, that the NSA was directed by the President to spy on American citizens without warrant, is not in dispute. That fact should prove an interesting dilemma for a Republican controlled US House that clearly is not only loathe to initiate impeachment proceedings, but does not even want to thoroughly investigate any of the five items brought up by the Illinois Assembly as high crimes and/or misdemeanors. Should HJR0125 be passed by the Illinois General Assembly, the US House will be forced by House Rules to take up the issue of impeachment as a privileged bill, meaning it will take precedence over other House business.
The Illinois General Assembly joins a growing chorus of voices calling for censure or impeachment of President Bush including Democratic state committees in Vermont, Wisconsin, New Mexico, Nevada and North Carolina as well as the residents themselves of seven towns in Vermont, seventy Vermont state legislators and Congressman John Conyers. The call for impeachment is starting to grow well beyond what could be considered a fringe movement. An ABC News/Washington Post Poll Conducted April 6-9 showed that 33% of Americans currently support Impeaching President Bush, coincidentally, only a similar amount supported impeaching Nixon at the start of the Watergate investigation. If and when Illinois HJR0125 hits the capitol and the individual charges are publicly investigated, that number is likely to grow rapidly. Combined with the very real likelihood that Rove is about to be indicted in the LeakGate investigation, and Bush is in real trouble beyond his plummeting poll numbers. His cronies in the Republican dominated congress will probably save him from the embarassment of an impeachment conviction, for now, but his Presidency will be all but finished.
Developing News; California Becomes Second State to Introduce Bush Impeachment
------------------------------------------
HJ0125 LRB094 20306 RLC 58347 r
1 HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION
2 WHEREAS, Section 603 of Jefferson's Manual of the Rules of 3 the United States House of Representatives allows federal 4 impeachment proceedings to be initiated by joint resolution of 5 a state legislature; and
6 WHEREAS, President Bush has publicly admitted to ordering 7 the National Security Agency to violate provisions of the 1978 8 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, a felony, specifically 9 authorizing the Agency to spy on American citizens without 10 warrant; and
11 WHEREAS, Evidence suggests that President Bush authorized 12 violation of the Torture Convention of the Geneva Conventions, 13 a treaty regarded a supreme law by the United States 14 Constitution; and
15 WHEREAS, The Bush Administration has held American 16 citizens and citizens of other nations as prisoners of war 17 without charge or trial; and
18 WHEREAS, Evidence suggests that the Bush Administration 19 has manipulated intelligence for the purpose of initiating a 20 war against the sovereign nation of Iraq, resulting in the 21 deaths of large numbers of Iraqi civilians and causing the 22 United States to incur loss of life, diminished security and 23 billions of dollars in unnecessary expenses; and
24 WHEREAS, The Bush Administration leaked classified 25 national secrets to further a political agenda, exposing an 26 unknown number of covert U. S. intelligence agents to potential 27 harm and retribution while simultaneously refusing to 28 investigate the matter; and
29 WHEREAS, The Republican-controlled Congress has declined
HJ0125 - 2 - LRB094 20306 RLC 58347 r
1 to fully investigate these charges to date; therefore, be it
2 RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE 3 NINETY-FOURTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, THE 4 SENATE CONCURRING HEREIN, that the General Assembly of the 5 State of Illinois has good cause to submit charges to the U. S. 6 House of Representatives under Section 603 that the President 7 of the United States has willfully violated his Oath of Office 8 to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United 9 States; and be it further
10 RESOLVED, That George W. Bush, if found guilty of the 11 charges contained herein, should be removed from office and 12 disqualified to hold any other office in the United States.
If you live in lovely state of Illinois and have any concern about this country, I encourage you to contact your state representatives and senators.
Legal Eagals care to comment on this?
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