‘Kremlin justice’ in the U.S.

Consider this lede from a story published today by McClatchy Newspapers. In fact, read it twice.

“For six years, the Bush administration, aided by Justice Department political appointees, has pursued an aggressive legal effort to restrict voter turnout in key battleground states in ways that favor Republican political candidates,” McClatchy reported. “The administration intensified its efforts last year as President Bush’s popularity and Republican support eroded heading into a midterm battle for control of Congress, which the Democrats won.”

We’re well over six years into Bush’s presidency, and I suspect a lot of Americans have become desensitized to political outrages — we’ve learned so many infuriating things, it’s easy to become inured to what once was shocking. After a while, one is tempted to throw their arms up in disgust, say “there they go again,” and wait for January 2009.

But these two sentences are, or at least should be, breathtaking. When it looked like Republicans were going to have a tough election year, the Justice Department helped prevent Americans from voting, in specific areas, to help GOP candidates. This isn’t normal. It’s not politics-as-usual. It’s not consistent with the American tradition. And if it sounds at all familiar, it’s because, as Jonathan Chait explained, we’ve seen it before — in Russia.

As Atty. Gen. Alberto R. Gonzales takes to Capitol Hill to testify today, it’s worth keeping in mind what this whole imbroglio is really about. It’s not about whether Gonzales and his minions lied to Congress and the public. (They did, repeatedly.) It’s not even about whether the Justice Department improperly fired federal prosecutors. (It did, of course.) It’s about whether the Bush administration sought to subvert democracy by turning the federal judicial system into a weapon of the ruling party.

Many people think of democracy as free elections, some other basic rights (like free speech) and not much more. But really, that’s only the beginning. There are plenty of countries that have free and fair elections and yet are clearly not democratic because their ruling parties have a permanent, immovable hammerlock on power.

One key thing that separates strong democracies (such as the United States) from weak democracies (such as Russia) is that the latter use the police power of the state as a tool of the ruling party.

It’s a painful thought, and Bush hasn’t started throwing political enemies in jail, but using federal law enforcement as a Republican-protection operation is absolutely Kremlin-like.

Chait’s list of examples, while familiar, is chilling.

* U.S. Attorneys were fired for prosecuting Republicans or failing to prosecute Democrats.

* U.S. Attorneys retained their jobs after bringing trumped up charges against Democrats before the election.

* U.S. Attorneys have investigated or indicted 298 Democratic officeholders and only 67 Republicans, which no one seems to even try to defend as reasonable.

* The Department of Homeland Security was used to track down state lawmakers in Texas who planned to oppose Tom DeLay’s re-redistricting scheme.

* NYC used police spies to monitor critics of the Republicans during their national convention in 2004.

Chait concludes:

It would be very easy to overreact to all these things and conclude that our democracy is imperiled or that Republicans are wannabe Putins. But almost nobody seems to be overreacting.

Most people are under-reacting. Allowing the security apparatus of the state to help tilt elections is an extremely grave precedent. When the line of acceptable behavior can be moved without much protest, it often can be moved further the next time.

No, we’re not becoming Russia. But becoming just a little bit like Russia still ought to be considered a major scandal.

Our justice system is premised on equality and fairness. Americans need to have confidence that the law will be applied impartially.

The Bush gang has not only abandoned the principle, they no longer care whether the electorate has that confidence or not. The top goal is the protection of the ruling party — and there is no second goal.

Something to keep in mind during today’s hearings.

You can’t expain the MSM to cover such an important issue in depth, can you?

Speaking of the MSM, interesting Broder column today (on journalists and Imus). I can’t really disagree with any of it, but is David Broder really the kind of journalist who should be writing this: “But last week the tattered reputation of journalism in this country saw severe damage.”

Speaking of tattered reputation of journalism, isn’t Broder due for another one of those “Bush Comeback!” stories?

  • “…effort to restrict voter turnout in key battleground states…”

    I think this is what Karl Rove meant last October when he said, concerning poll numbers, that he had “the” numbers.

  • “It’s about whether the Bush administration sought to subvert democracy by turning the federal judicial system into a weapon of the ruling party.”

    Yikes. Plus, it’s true. We are now experiencing SubvertDemocracyGate!

  • The Soviet-style thuggery of the Republicans started during the voter recount in Florida. 9/11 just gave these bastards a blank check. However, progressive blogs rose from Florida’s ashes, and that is where the power of truth lies today.

  • I’ve always wondered about the ABC miniseries Amerika, the Con reaction to ABC’s “liberal” Day After Movie (which shook me up when I saw it.) I found that if the roles were reversed (the “brave” rebel Cons in place of the evil Soviet overlords) that there would be no difference in the plot. I only stomached about the first episode of that crap orama before sticking with something more intelligent, like Married With Children.

    Maybe this is why the wingnuts fought so hard against commies, because the commies accomplished what the wingnuts wanted to do?

  • We have something our own political tradition which more closely resembles the current administration than does the Kremlin: the City Boss system of the early 20th century. In a strange mixture of political regimes and organized crime, made possible by Prohibition, crime families used their political connections to secure and extend their profits. If anything the Bush Crime Family is even more blatant. Rather than simply using government for private gain, they stole the government and occupied it themselves.

  • Anyone who puts party above nation is a Stalinist. Yes, Uncle Joe and Karl Rove are of similar temperment. -Kevo

  • Anyone who puts party above nation is a Fascist.
    Anyone whom advocates a Permanent Majority political system is …Newt Gingrich.
    .

  • why the wingnuts fought so hard against commies

    Because they wanted money, and communism would take it away from them. No one like that wants wealth re-distribution to the blacks. Racism is an unspoken tenet of conservatism in this country and you don’t understand shit if you don’t look at it that way.

    The USSR and siliar countries are imperfect implementations of an indealistic, and by my view, maybe impossible vision. But the wingnuts aren’t scared of authoritarianism, they’re scared of wealth redistribution that they’re not in charge of, and of being out of power.

  • A few ago, NPR’s All Things Considered had a piece about repression in Putin’s Russia which included this example of how Russia is inching back to the Soviet era: “Parliament is now dominated by a pro-Putin majority that speeds through Kremlin-issued legislation, often too quickly for deputies even to read new bills.”

    Sounds like Congress during the Tom DeLay years, doesn’t it?

    Link to transcript and audio: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7678874

  • That should have said ‘similar countries’ in my comment. Why are the Republicans against eminent domain and the liberal wing of the court for it?

    Affirmative action by itself isn’t enough to solve the problems of historical racism. You still have the criminal underclass in black neighborhoods- kids who aren’t being raised right in bad neighborhoods go to all black public schools, and you can fund them better but you still can’t get the best teachers because no one wants to live and work in a community where her own students might rape her or a 6 year old kid might point a gun at her. You can’t take the kids away from the bad influence in the neighborhood.

    Racism isn’t real, and blacks can be improved. But the effective way to do it is to break up the blocks and to have people live in real desegregated neighborhoods instead of keeping huge de facto ghettoes. The white don’t want their little girls to grow up with the blacks and that’s what this is all about. None of these people want to have to live with the black man or give him a dollar.

  • You know, if this doesn’t lead to impeachment, nothing will.

    I will note, however, that the fact Democrats still won shows just how incompetent the GOP is. Quite frankly, it’s kinda funny.

  • It’s a painful thought, and Bush hasn’t started throwing political enemies in jail, but using federal law enforcement as a Republican-protection operation is absolutely Kremlin-like.–CB

    Tell that to the medical marijuana activists who are now serving time in federal prisons for obeying state law.

  • The right railed against communism (I seriously hate that misnomer) because it united the public against a common enemy.

    Instead of communism, today we have terrorism.

    It’s more of a distraction technique then idealism. They hope that while the people are busy hating communism or terrorism they won’t notice what is going on right under their noses.

    Thankfully, some of us can multi-task.

  • I’m not saying that the Supreme Court would one day use the 14th Amendment to say that Brown v. Bd. of Ed. isn’t working and therefore the ghettoes have to be broken up somehow- but doubtless there are people who think that someday they might do it. What I’m saying is that, despite liberals’ belief that so many conservatives are not racists and misogynists, but really just jolly, lighthearted, folk who happen to see things a little differently than us because they’re just a little dumb (with, albeit, a few mean people among them) those kind of concerns do loom in the background and are what really motivate all these political confrontations, are what motivate resistance to anything that looks like a move towards affirmative action or wealth redistribution. People are scared that you’re going to take the lunch right out of their hand and give it to a black guy, and they’re scared of black guys.

  • Swan–
    What in the holy hell are you typing about? Seriously … are you responding to an imaginary friend? No one has asked you to clarify your totally off topic comments, so not sure why you keep going on and on and on about the racism issue.

  • I will be among the first to wholeheartedly agree that this republic is moving towards the “near-beer” democracy of Russia—but I’d also argue that the Republic has moved a great deal towards “an American Neo-Nazification.”

    Consider that “the Party machine” is responsible for injecting that little clause in the Patriot Act. Anyone ever bother to read the whole thing, from start to finish? It’s chock-full of “little clauses” that are open to definition and interpretation—and they can be applied subjectively on a political scale.

    Consider that Bush appropriated WTC and 9/11 as his personal “Reichstag-Fire” moment—and anyone who has elected to disagree with him on anything, from that day to this, has been subjected to the barrage of right-wing “antipatriot” adjectives.

    The “Liberals and Progressives” of Bush’s today are the contemporary equivalent to the “Juden” of Hitler’s yesterday. We’ve already seen example piled upon example of people being denied employment—because they don’t belong to “the Party.” We see people who lose their jobs because of this as well—case in point being the USAs who were “purged.” The political will of the majority of the people is rudely and summarily discounted because those who wish for change are not a majority of “faithful Party members.”

    Repeatedly, we see report after report, issued by professional group after professional group—whether the report-topic is global warming, Katrina assistance, levee status, air quality, water quality, poverty issues, housing industry slowdowns, student loan issues, criminal eavesdropping, agricultural hazards, family support, prescription drugs, unemployment counts, alternative fuel technology, or import/export measures—edited by partisan clones with little-no-no real world experience or education in the subject areas.

    Clearly, efforts have been made do disenfranchise non-Party citizens from the electoral process. One can only guess as to how long it will be before Party membership will become a prerequisite to owning a firearm, or a computer…or the freedom to formulate an opinion on the criminalities of the Bush administration. Will the right to own property be governed by Party membership as well?

    One can only wait—and wonder….

  • We’ll probably never know, but I often wondered if voter supression behind Rove’s arrogant “I have THE math” comment. And Chait is correct — “Most people are under-reacting.”

  • It’s a painful tradeoff- what do you do? If you do more to integrate the blacks, you get them better socialized as a group (because right now they’re not as well socialized, and whites are better socialized) and you get less crime and violence in the long run, but as with all integration it wil be painful. If you keep putting off the problem, you keep having a criminal underclass committing crimes against people.

    The racist Republicans don’t care, they just see all blacks as genetically bad, so they think it’s not a question of improving their lot- and these are the people giving the marching orders for a lot of the Republicans.

    This is where Blacks are really important. The conservatives need conservative Blacks to screw over the rest of them, because publicly, to most of us racism is wrong. So conservatives do things to promote even blacks to being racist against blacks.

  • “It’s a painful thought, and Bush hasn’t started throwing political enemies in jail, but using federal law enforcement as a Republican-protection operation is absolutely Kremlin-like.”

    There’s a big yet to that. Rememeber, it’s been during Bush’s tenure that he’s reserved the right to detain, without legal recourse, anyone he deems to be an enemy combatant.

  • I will be among the first to wholeheartedly agree that this republic is moving towards the “near-beer” democracy of Russia—but I’d also argue that the Republic has moved a great deal towards “an American Neo-Nazification.” — Steve, @18

    That’s because, although the two systems (Nazi and Commie) stemmed from two different philosophies, the application of those philosophies didn’t differ all that much. All the examples you quote — hiring and firing according to party loyalty, for example — can be found in both the Soviet (and countries within their sphere of influence) and the Nazi histories.

    Add in the control of communications to the control of the police and judiciary and the resemblances get even stronger. The police arrest, the judge convicts and the press tells you how wonderful it all is…

  • You know, I’m usually the first to scream “Godwin’s Law!!” whenever someone makes a Nazi reference.

    But in this case, I think Steve’s analogies are quite frightening in their accuracy.

    **shudders**

  • So….is it Watergate? The smoking gun that people might actually find as important as a president’s sex life?

  • Actually, as far as federal government goes, Bush’s WH is not much better than Putin’s Russia. The only difference I see is that US has stronger democratic institutions that make Bush and his guys at least pretend not to act like tyrants.

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