Yesterday, a reporter confronted the president with a straightforward request for information: “Sir, did you send your then Chief of Staff and White House Counsel to the bedside of John Ashcroft while he was ill to get him to approve that program? And do you believe that kind of conduct from White House officials is appropriate?”
Bush responded, “I’m not going to talk about it.”
Today, the White House press corps did a little follow up with Bush spokesperson Tony Fratto, who was as helpful as the president.
Q: Let me just follow up on that. Yesterday, Kelly asked the President straight up about the report of when Gonzales was counsel and sending Andy Card down to the hospital. The President refused to answer, saying it was a national security issue. No part of her question had anything to do with national security issues.
FRATTO: No, there are two points there. One is the discussion of classified programs; and the second is deliberative discussions among and between advisors to the President — and neither of which is an open window for us to look into and talk about.
Now, I think the President — I think that’s the point that the President was making. It puts us in a difficult communications position, because we understand there are questions out there and it’s difficult for us from the podium. But that’s not something that we can get into, and we’re not going to get into….
Q: How does it jeopardize the safety and security of Americans, to say whether he ordered those guys to go to the [hospital] room?
FRATTO: Any time we talk about classified programs you’re opening the door, and we need to be very careful in how we talk about it.
Transparent nonsense. Reporters asked questions that in no way related to national security or classified information. “Under what circumstances is it appropriate for White House aides to go to — to bypass the chain of command of the acting Attorney General and go to….” but Fratto cut the question off. No comment.
“Does the White House deny that this incident occurred? … Do you guys deny that took place?” Again, nothing. “Tony, was there anything factually incorrect about Comey’s version?” Nada.
This is painfully stupid.
Yesterday, Atrios noted, “Back in those happy days in the 90s, if Clinton had refused to answer a question like this a shitstorm would’ve erupted. Ted Koppel would’ve put up a ’17 days and still no answer’ clock. Tweety would have had 37 blond conservative lawyers on every night to demand ‘accountability.’ etc… etc…”
I couldn’t agree more. Really, there’s no excuse here. James Comey exposed a stunning series of events. The White House finds the whole thing inconvenient, so the Bush gang has decided to simply ignore questions. It’s obvious they could talk about the incident without dealing with national security secrets — we know it, they know it — but silence is easier than accountability.
All of a sudden, the White House is led by Bartleby the Scrivener, who could perform his duties, but he “prefered not to.”
There’s no reason in the world for the media to let the White House get away with such obstinacy. The Bush gang has been caught in the middle of yet another scandal and believes “no comment” should be good enough. C’mon, reporters, are you going to take that lying down?
In a very pleasant surprise, the WaPo editorial page gets it.
No one is asking Mr. Bush to talk about classified information, and no one is discounting the terrorist threat. But there is a serious question here about how far Mr. Bush went to pressure his lawyers to implement his view of the law. There is an even more serious question about the president’s willingness, that effort having failed, to go beyond the bounds of what his own Justice Department found permissible….
These are important topics for public discussion, and if anyone doubts that they can safely be discussed in public, they need look no further than Mr. Comey’s testimony. Instead of doing so, Mr. Bush wants to short-circuit that discussion by invoking the continuing danger of al-Qaeda….
The president would like to make this unpleasant controversy disappear behind the national security curtain. That cannot be allowed to happen.
Note to reporters: keep asking the questions. They deserve answers.