‘This is going to get worse, not better’

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, who testifies before the House Judiciary Committee today, believes he has “weathered the storm.” He was caught in the midst of a massive scandal he still can’t explain, his Justice Department is divided and dysfunctional, and he’s lost the trust of pretty much everyone who has objectively considered the facts, but Bush is satisfied — so Gonzales is “confident” that he’s going to stay right where he is.

The embattled AG is assuming the scandal isn’t going to get worse. Purged U.S. attorneys John McKay and David Iglesias believe that the scandal will not only grow more intense, but that criminal charges are likely.

“I think there will be a criminal case that will come out of this,” McKay said during his meeting with Times journalists. “This is going to get worse, not better.”…

McKay said he believes obstruction-of-justice charges will be filed if investigators conclude that the dismissal of any of the eight prosecutors was motivated by an attempt to influence ongoing public-corruption or voter-fraud investigations….

Additionally, McKay and Iglesias said they believe Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty lied under oath when they testified before Congress that the eight prosecutors were fired for performance-related reasons and because of policy disputes with Justice Department headquarters.

McKay relayed an anecdote that when Gonzales first became Attorney General, he addressed all of the nation’s U.S. Attorneys at a gathering in Arizona. He told them, “I work for the White House; you work for the White House.” McKay said he thought at the time, “He couldn’t have meant that speech,” given the traditional independence of U.S. Attorneys. “It turns out he did.”

And yet, despite all the evidence, and all the opposition, House Republicans have decided to try a new strategy — offer Gonzales their full-throated support.

Subscription-only Roll Call reported that Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee today will demand an end to what one called an “endless piscine expedition” in the purge scandal.

[U]nlike the Senate, where Republicans generally have been tough on Gonzales, House GOPers intend to call for an end to the wide-ranging probe that has consumed the Justice Department since the start of the year.

“We’re going to make it clear it’s time to let the attorney general get back to work,” said Rep. Lamar Smith (R-Texas), the ranking member on Judiciary.

The degree of shameless hackery is almost impressive. These guys wait until new evidence emerges of wrongdoing and then they announce that the investigation should come to an abrupt halt. So much for the law and order party….

As for Gonzales’s current standing, the NYT article about the AG’s sense that he’s sticking around suggests the Justice Department has been damaged by the scandal, with resignations, divided loyalties, and a total lack of leadership.

Mr. Bush’s press secretary, Tony Snow, said Wednesday that the president “still supports the attorney general fully and wholly.”

Of course he does. Just a few weeks ago, Gonzales’ resignation was a foregone conclusion. A Republican with close ties to the White House said Bush and Gonzales were “the only two people on the planet Earth who don’t see” the need for the AG to step down. The Senate hearing in which Gonzales was supposed to save his skin turned out to be a disaster.

But, again, the Bush gang rejects political norms. Our political system is supposed to follow certain unwritten political “rules.” When a cabinet secretary screws up, creates a scandal, becomes a distraction, loses the nation’s confidence, and possibly engages in criminal behavior, he or she is supposed to resign. If a resignation isn’t offered, a president is supposed to ask for it.

But this president doesn’t concern himself with these “rules.” Donald Rumsfeld, Alphonso Jackson, and Rod Paige proved that the president is more than willing to tolerate cabinet secretaries staying on far too long.

Gonzales has become the most reviled man in the administration, after having been caught lying and losing control of the Justice Department. The rules say Gonzales has to go. Bush, meanwhile, is The Decider — and The Decider doesn’t much care about the rules.

A month ago, the New York Daily News quoted a “senior Republican” saying, “[Bush] wants to fight, but that will change because it has to.”

I can almost hear Bush saying, “No, it doesn’t.”

The administration obviously learned from bin Laden and Saddam Hussein how to behave – when in trouble, head for the caves or build a bunker. It also helps to scream “victory”.

  • “Gonzales has become the most reviled man in the administration.”

    Sadly, no. But he’s certainly in my top five, and can take some consolation from the fact that it’s a very tough competition, with so many outstanding and “well-qualified” (at least in this respect) entrants.

  • But wouldn’t it be a US Attorney who would bring charges? Let’s hope some of them have some integrity.

  • OT but what the heck: Found this story on Verizon dropping sponsorship of a musician for some dubious conduct onstage (apparently went beyond the morals line at Verizon) interesting.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/arts/music/10akon.html?hp

    I find this interesting in that it is Verizon, the phone company that turned over our private phone call records to the Government without a fight. I wonder which act is more morally improper–simulated sexual actions on stage at a concert, or the invasion of millions of US citizens’ privacy rights. Time for people to drop their sponsorship of Verizon.

  • Tomorrow as sung by little Fredo Gonzales:

    The sun’ll come out
    Tomorrow
    Bet your deleted email
    That tomorrow
    There’ll be sun!

    Just thinkin’ about
    Tomorrow
    Clears away the committees
    And the questions
    ‘Til there’s none!

    When I’m grilled a day
    That’s harsh,
    And truthy,
    I just stick out my chin
    And Grin,
    And Say,
    Oh!

    The sun’ll come out
    Tomorrow
    So ya gotta be smug
    ‘Til tomorrow
    Come what may
    Tomorrow! Tomorrow!
    I love ya Tomorrow!
    You’re always
    A shred
    A way!

  • You know, everything is a game to the republicans. They aren’t in government to serve the people; they have no interest in democracy or the issues important to tens of millions of Americans. They are simply there to advance the conservative ideology that has somehow morphed into pseudo-fascism. They advance their campaign contributors and business partners financial interests, that’s it.
    Rove (having more power than any unelected official in history, with the help of the Bu$h/Cheney regime and a subserviant, rubber stamp bunch of congressional pussies) has systematically politicized almost every facet of the fedeeral government.
    Last I heard, America was a democracy, and there are certain things that anyone with integrity and character wouldn’t touch, for instance, our Constitution and Bill of Rights. But this bunch of traitors have no character or integrity.
    I for one think they should be rounded up, tried for treason, and put in front of a firing squad. I am not embellishing my feelings here; I have almost reached my limit with these people and their usurpations of our nations laws. These people are exactly what our founding fathers warned us about. God I wish we could ressurect Tom Paine, or Sam Adams, or Hancock. They would shove their boots so far up Bu$h’s and Roves’ assess they’d be coughing up shit for weeks, or at least until they are swinging in the gallows.

  • The AP quotes Texas Rep. Lamar Smith at today’s House Judiciary hearing as saying that Congress should quit investigating, “because the number of accusations has grown while the amount of evidence showing wrongdoing has not.”

    Yup. Anytime a crook won’t give you a straight answer, might as well quit looking.

  • This is actually working out perfectly for the administration. Through executive priviledge, the most damage that will come to them will have already occurred, through various “leaving for personal” reasons excuses for various low-lifes and unimportant folks there on the admin staff. Meanwhile, the DOJ is so undermined and morale so much in tatters, that the very people we need to have in a place like that are the only ones who will really want to leave, since they aren’t the ones playing the game. So the longer they drag this out, the more it actually helps them in their goal of turning the DOJ into a fiefdom of political hackery.

  • CB: “Bush, meanwhile, is The Decider — and The Decider doesn’t much care about the rules.”

    No, Karl Rove is The Decider. You know damn well if he walked into the Oval Office and said, “Gonzales has to go”, he’d be gone in a New York minute.

    But he’s never going to do that because a _real_ Attorney General would have him in jail on Day One.

  • The entire Republican caucus in the House is like the crew of a submarine, stuck in a submerged boat while their enemy zigs and zags on the surface above, dropping salvo after salvo of depth charges. They’re running out of air, but they can’t surface while the depth-charges are exploding all over the place.

    Dems are ‘the enemy” in this scenario, and Truth is represented by the depth-charging. The submarine? — why, it’s the severely-battered credibility of the House GOP caucus as a whole. Eventually, one of those depth charges is going to rip a big, gaping hole in the hull of that banged-up submarine, and it’ll sink—with all hands aboard “going down to Davey Jones.”

    Dems need to keep hammering away at this. It isn’t about DoJ not being able to do it’s job; it’s NEVER been about DoJ not being able to do it’s job. It IS, however, all about preventing the Rovification of the United States of America—into the Feudal Kingdom of Bu$hylvania.

    And—preventing THAT is why a sane man like Thomas Jefferson supported the existence of the Second Amendment. If he were around today, I imagine he’d be screaming “let them take arms” at the top of his lungs—and that’s what these nattering ninnyhammers on the GOP side of the aisle are “most deathly afraid of,” I think….

  • The decider is supporting the forgetter, and the republican representatives today are distracters in throwing up a smoke screen today to dilute the hearing today with off-topic questions.

  • Gonzales is the lightning rod. As long as he’s taking the hits the rest of the Admin isn’t.
    Rove-Cheney-Bush want him right where he is. Time spent pursuing DOJ is time not spent investigating other aspects of the administration.

    Yesterday I got $52 worth of gas into a tank that held $21 worth of gas in January ’01. Hmmm . . .

  • Yep. Stop the investigation before [not]Goodling talks. Sure guys, we’ll buy that one once we finish paying for our prime Florida real estate and that nice bridge in New York.

  • From the transcript of today’s testimony.

    Conyers: The last time that you testified before this……

    Gonzales: Ah, one moment Mr. Chairman. I don’t recall ever having testified before this committee before. I’ll have may assistant check my calendar and I’ll get back to you at a latter date.

  • I don’t get it. What about Goodling? What about the emails between Rove and Cummins about cageing? Where are the emails from the RNC server? Why haven’t criminal charges been filed against Gonzales for lying to the Senate along with McNultty? What about the outing of Valerie Plame? What about the hiring and firing practices by Schlozman, Goodling, and others at the DoJ? Why are House Republicans so willing to just forget about it? We already know this is the most corrupt WH and the most Politicized DoJ ever and that there has been no…none…zero accountability for the past 6yrs. and now that there is these Repukes want to walk away from it. Besides the Iraq war the number 2 top issue in the ’06 election was gov. corruption and now House Repubs are trying to ignore it. Did they not hear us? Maybe we need to say it louder…doesn’t matter if its Dems or Repubs…corruption has got to end.

  • “…McKay and Iglesias said they believe Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty lied under oath…”

    Time to draw up the articles of impeachment. When Republican lawyers say the AG has perjured himself, and the president still supports that AG, then it’s time to take aim at the whole shebang.

    Come on, Dems. Do your goddamn job!!!

  • I think we are all missing the point, which was pointed out on NPR’s Morning Edition: The whole reason they are in this mess (Attorney firings) was because they wanted to avoid a Senate confirmation fight over any of the new appointees. Firing AGAG would require a confirmation hearing. We all know what a circus a confirmation would bring, and the Bush White House knows exactly what dirt would come out during the process, so he wants to avoid that at all costs. He no longer has his rubber-stamp GOP loaded congress to cover his back. As long as Gonzo stays, he will avoid that.

    Besides, who could he bring in except possibly a reincarnated Lincoln, or Jesus Christ himself that everybody would trust?

  • Is this non-scandal really still in the news? Does anyone other than the fringe left really care? I wish someone would just say, yeah it was political and there is nothing you can do about it, please see Bill Clinton.

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