Realistically, the 2008 presidential campaign will unfold slowly over the next year, and there will be no shortage of the number of issues, controversies, and personalities that will shape the contest. Chances are, by October 2008, the name Scooter Libby will probably not be leading the evening newscasts’ coverage of the campaign.
But in the meantime, I think Bush’s commutation should hang around the neck of every GOP presidential hopeful. The president has not only tarnished the White House with his conduct, he’s put his party’s possible successors in an interesting position: they’re now supposed to defend — even applaud — Bush’s scandalous conduct.
Fred Thompson was first out of the gate in praising the president’s decision, and Rudy Giuliani followed shortly thereafter. With any luck, the rest of the field will soon follow. (Remember, at a recent GOP debate, none of the Republican presidential hopefuls argued in support of Libby’s prosecution.)
Perhaps, then, we can start drawing up a list of questions reporters can and should ask the GOP field:
* Will you, as president, routinely overturn criminal sentences for unrepentant convicted felons before they serve time behind bars?
* If obstruction of justice and perjury are not serious crimes deserving of serious punishment, what other felonies are you inclined to disregard?
* Will your White House out covert CIA agents in a time of war, too?
* If there are two systems of justice — one for politically-connected Republicans, and one for everyone else — how will you decide who makes the cut?
* Why is privilege more important than justice?
Feel free to add your own.