Abu Gonzales the Torture Guy is gone from the Justice Department. See Attorney General Gonzales resigns CNN.com 08/27/07 and news reports all over the place.
In his resignation statement, he included the oddly Oedipal comment, "Even my worst days as attorney general have been better than my father's best days."
Gonzales was a key finger in the dike for the Cheney-Bush administration. He was not only willing to thoroughly politicize his department, he was more specifically willing to block prosecutions against administration officials, even over defying Congressional subpoenas.
Also, now that the Democrats are in control of Congress, the approval process for a new Attorney General is a potential minefield. Josh Marshall is even picking up indications that Bush may try a "recess appointment" of a new AG to avoid the approval process (Recess Appointment TalkingPointsMemo.com 07/27/07. He writes:
Just as we saw with the 'pardon [S]cooter' movement, the word seems already to have gone out to the folks on the right to start preparing the ground for just such a move by the president. I've already heard a few just this morning saying it would be the right thing for the president to do.The White House has become a political bunker. They literally made a decision that they could disregard laws and disregard Congressional oversight. Now their public support has collapsed. Even maintaining the support they do have has become dependent on no new major deterioration in the military situation in Iraq, a matter over which their control is limited. The leadership of the Justice Department has disintegrated.
Tom Tomorrow this week presents a scenario for what should happen, but won't.
Reading the Cheney-Bush Kremlinology, Laura Rozen at her War and Piece blog for 07/27/07 picks up a diplomatic nuance:
Unlike the Rove resignation, where Bush and Rove appeared together, Gonzales and Bush are delivering their statements in separate appearances - a sign, perhaps, of the circumstances under which he is leaving, that he was fired.There will be attempts, I'm sure, to find some common source for the network of incompetence and criminality that has been some prominent in the this administration. I'm not sure there is one. But if there is, I'm guessing that "Dick Cheney" is probably about as close to being it as one could get.
I agree with Glenn Greenwald (The Democrats' responsibility in the wake of Gonzales' resignation Salon 07/27/07) about the basics of the challenge this presents to the Democrats in Congress. They have to fight for the Constitution and governmental integrity on this one. No excuses:
No matter what, they must ensure that Gonzales' replacement is a genuinely trustworthy and independent figure.Greenwald's point is dead-on. When the Dems confirm one of Bush's cronies, he turns out to be a Bush crony. Surprise, surprise. They have to take the bull by the horns on this one. Even if that means fighting a recess appointment. Which means telling the Big Pundits stewing in the juices of High Broderism to kiss off when they bitch and moan about how "partisan" the Democrats are being.
That means that Democrats must not confirm anyone, such as Michael Chertoff, who has been ensconced in the Bush circle. Instead, the DOJ and the country desperately need a completely outside figure who will ensure that the prosecutorial machinery operates independently, even if - especially if - that means finally investigating the litany of Executive branch abuses and lawbreaking which have gone almost entirely uninvestigated, as well uncovering those which remain concealed.
The standard excuse invoked by Democrats to justify their capitulations - namely, that they cannot attract a filibuster-proof or veto-proof majority to defy the President - will be unavailing here. They themselves can filibuster the confirmation of any proposed nominee to replace Gonzales. They do not need Blue Dogs or Bush Dogs or any of the other hideous cowards in their caucus who remain loyal to the most unpopular President in modern American history. The allegedly "Good Democrats" can accomplish this vital step all on their own. They only need 40 Senate votes to achieve it.
Tags: alberto gonzales
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