Better sycophants, please

When it comes to the prosecutor purge scandal, there are a variety of important problems in search of a resolution. We have possible crimes, cover-ups, lies, contradictions, trumped up crises, and the systemic politicization of the Justice Department.

But that’s not all. As Jonathan Chait notes today, “I have become rather alarmed at the low quality of the pro-administration spin.” It’s true; the attempts to rationalize this scandal have, well, sucked.

Even if we overlook some of the more routine nonsense — honestly, if I see one more right-wing blog argue that Clinton did the same thing, I’ll tear what’s left of my hair out — Chait emphasizes the fact that the administration has outsourced most of its p.r. defense, leaving it to conservative media outlets that are even less persuasive the White House communications operation.

1. The Weekly Standard believes the scandal isn’t important because those concerned about it are driven by impure motives — congressional Dems, the magazine said, are merely “trying to cripple [Bush’s] ability to govern for the rest of his term.” Dems are conducting an investigation, backed by several Republicans, because they want to push Bush’s approval rating below the low 30s? To block a policy agenda that doesn’t exist? No wonder this hasn’t caught on.

2. The Washington Post editorial page, meanwhile, argued that that Gonzales has found himself in a mess “because he and others in his shop appear to have tried to cover up something that, as far as we yet know, didn’t need covering.” As Chait noted, if the Post is to be believed, the administration has “told lie after lie for no real reason at all. I suppose it could be true. There may, however, be another explanation. Perhaps William of Occam would have something to say about this.”

3. The Wall Street Journal editorial page conceded that, in theory, it “would be genuine grounds for outrage … if a U.S. attorney were dismissed to interfere with a specific prosecution, or to protect some crony.” However, the editorial continued, while Clinton had done this, “there is no such evidence involving any of the eight Bush attorneys.”

The WSJ’s take, not surprisingly, is the most ridiculous.

I’m afraid the Journal’s editorial board is well beyond reason, but Chait does his best.

No such evidence? How bizarre. There was no evidence that Clinton had done anything like this, unless you consider the Journal’s preternatural suspicion of everything Clinton did to be “evidence.” With Bush, on the other hand, there’s an enormous amount of evidence. So far, we know that New Mexico Republicans called prosecutor David Iglesias before last November’s elections to urge him to indict Democrats on charges of voter fraud. When he refused, the chairman of the New Mexico GOP complained to Karl Rove. Rove, in turn, complained to the Justice Department about Iglesias. And, shortly after that, Iglesias was added to the list of prosecutors to be fired.

On top of that, you have lots of suspicious behavior lurking in the background. There is an e-mail from Gonzales’s chief of staff explicitly judging prosecutors on the basis of whether they are “loyal Bushies.” You have the Justice Department’s shifting stories as to exactly why it had fired the prosecutors. And Rove’s and Harriet Miers’s insistence that their testimony on the matter be given in private–without taking an oath or a transcript, and with a promise of no further follow-up testimony if contradictions arise–is not the sort of behavior you’d expect from people who have nothing to hide.

And, on top of that, you have a lot of pretty suggestive facts. You have the fact that, since the Bush administration came to power, U.S. attorneys have investigated or indicted just 67 Republicans, compared with 298 Democrats. You have a spurious preelection conviction of a Democratic governor’s appointee in Wisconsin that, after the election, was quickly and unanimously overturned by a three-judge panel featuring two Republican appointees. (The “evidence is beyond thin,” declared one judge.) Then there was the fact that the U.S. attorney investigating Jack Abramoff’s shady dealings with Guam was demoted the day after issuing his subpoena, thus halting the investigation.

Chait’s point isn’t just to highlight the seriousness of the scandal — this much is obvious — but to note that the right really needs to pick up its game. This scandal is likely to bring down an Attorney General, at a minimum. Hell, there’s some evidence the president was personally more involved than the administration has let on. Given this, the Weekly Standard, the Post editorial board, and the WSJ editorial board haven’t demonstrated any real spinning skills at all. Their justifications aren’t just easy to debunk, they’re too easy to debunk.

Chait is so concerned about the right’s flack skills that he graciously offers conservatives a defense for the purge scandal that they can embrace for their own use.

Most of this so-called “evidence” of the administration’s guilt comes from the administration itself–specifically, e-mails released by the Justice Department. But the Bush administration is a completely untrustworthy source. Remember the last time it released information that seemed to show a nefarious government conspiracy? That’s right: the Iraq WMD debacle. Why should we trust them now, when they steered us so wrong before? Liberals always say we shouldn’t take information from the Bush administration at face value, but now they want to do just that. Hypocrites!

That’s a good one. I can’t think of a comeback to this at all.

Just posted this in another topic, but in case you missed it.

A friend just alerted me to this blog entry from WaPo. Thought you might be interested in it.

Articles of Impeachment To Be Filed On Cheney

Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio), the most liberal of the Democratic presidential candidates in the primary field, declared in a letter sent to his Democratic House colleagues this morning that he plans to file articles of impeachment against Vice President Dick Cheney.

Here is the text of his letter, a copy of which was forwarded to the Sleuth:

April 17, 2007

Dear Colleague:

This week I intend to introduce Articles of Impeachment with respect to the conduct of Vice President Cheney. Please have your staff contact my office . . . if you would like to receive a confidential copy of the document prior to its introduction in the House.

Sincerely,

/s/

Dennis J. Kucinich

Member of Congress

If true, it’s about goddamned time. If not, maybe next time.

  • With Bush, on the other hand, there’s an enormous amount of evidence.

    Unfortunately nothing that Chait then cites is “evidence” either. He gives a timeline of events in the Iglesias matter – none of which are actually “evidence” of anything, until it can be shown the Iglesias’s firing was *specifically* linked to Domenici’s pressure – still hasn’t been proven until actually testimony or a “smoking gun” is procured. Otherwise it’s just a timeline of events. From there he moves on to “lots of suspiscious behavior” and “a lot of pretty suggestive facts”. And for this he is lauded for smacking down the WSJ?

    None of this stuff stuff constitutes “evidence” of anything – I would have flunked out of law school or be laughed out of a courtroom if I tried making Chait’s arguments as “evidence”.

    Is there something about this epsiode that is making *everybody* stupid?
    Better syncopants for our side, please.

  • “And, shortly after that, Iglesias was added to the list of prosecutors to be fired.”

    That phrase hit me like a load of bricks because it makes me wonder if Sen. Pete Domenici knew there was a purge of less than completely loyal US Attorneys going on. Numerous times I have read from a variety of sources that it would be extremely odd for a Congressperson to have contact with any USA about ongoing litigation. Domenici surel has ben on the Hill omg enough to be aware of that faux pas. So why did Domenici think this was OK all of a sudden to pressure Iglesias and then went ahead to run it up the White House’s flagpole when he didn’t get the response he wanted?

    Not to be too tin foil hat here, but was there a broader awareness among Republican Party leadership of the program to turn DOJ into a pro-Republican attack dog? Are there Republican Congresspeople invovled in assembling the list of USAs to dispose to be replaced by loyal toadies?

  • and maybe a little lesson for me in how to use the word “sycophants” LOL

  • “…honestly, if I see one more right-wing blog argue that Clinton did the same thing, I’ll tear what’s left of my hair out …”

    The bad news:
    Uh-oh.
    Never underestimate the depravity of right-wingers.

    The good news:
    You can’t possibly look worse that Ron Howard.

  • As we on Teh Left suffer from “Outrage Fatigue,” perhaps our contemporaries on the Right suffer from “Spin Burnout.”

  • What’s happening is what usually happens with far right regimes: they defeat themselves. Had there been Germans who really wanted to fight WW2, they’d likely have won, but having to kowtow to Hitler and the Nazi morons guaranteed in the end they lost.

  • He forgot to mention Monica Goodling’s rush to resign and vow to plead the 5th before even being asked to testify. Why is she so paranoid. Not to mention the provision slipped into the Patriot Act without knowledge of the Senate by the DOJ lackey giving Gonzales the right to appoint AGs without Senate approval…Why was this done in such a sneaky manner and why was it even thought up except for ulterior motives. Starting there should explain that the DOJ’s motivation from the beginning was to politicize the office of AGs nation wide or why try to avoid senate approval in such a sneaky manner. It gives the whole plan structure.

  • As we on Teh Left suffer from “Outrage Fatigue,” perhaps our contemporaries on the Right suffer from “Spin Burnout.”

    [yam]

    That would explain a lot. They’ve gotten so dizzy they’re puking out gibberish.

  • 95 U.S. Attorneys.

    Eight get fired.

    Please, pay attention to the 87 who weren’t. They are the scandel.

  • “Liberals always say we shouldn’t take information from the Bush administration at face value, but now they want to do just that. Hypocrites!” — Chait

    There’s “blind faith based on obedience” and there’s “belief based upon evidence.” Two very different things. Chait is well aware of this but obscuring the difference enables him to catapult his propaganda. Mother would be ashamed.

  • Please, pay attention to the 87 who weren’t. They are the scandel.

    welcome back Lance, we’ve missed your comments. Like that one. You are, as usual, spot on.

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