There have been hints — some subtle, some not — that Republicans may soon turn their rhetorical guns on special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald. As those hints get less restrained, I think we can safely predict where these guys are going.
It started two weeks ago, when House Judiciary Committee Chairman James Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.) started complaining to the Justice Department about Fitzgerald’s office. Shortly thereafter, RNC Chairman Ken Mehlman, appearing on Meet the Press, said he had “tremendous confidence” in Fitzgerald, but when asked if he’d still have confidence in him if indictments started coming down, Mehlman would only say “I’m not going to speculate.” The right’s disparagements were captured perfectly by William Safire, who vilified Fitzgerald as a “runaway prosecutor.”
More recently, the writing on the wall has grown bolder. Former Sen. Peter Fitzgerald (R-Ill.) said this week he believes there is mounting “political pressure” to oppose Fitzgerald’s reappointment as a U.S. Attorney, once his term ends this fall. Indeed, House Speaker Dennis Hastert has notably rejected calls to support another term for the prosecutor.
As Joe Conason noted, it’s about to get worse.
Circled in a bristling perimeter around the White House, the friends and allies of Mr. Rove can soon be expected to fire their rhetorical mortars at Patrick Fitzgerald, the special prosecutor investigating the White House exposure of C.I.A. operative Valerie Wilson. Indeed, the preparations for that assault began months ago in the editorial columns of The Wall Street Journal, which has tarred Mr. Fitzgerald as a “loose cannon” and an “unguided missile.”
Evidently Senator Pat Roberts, the Kansas Republican who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, will lead the next foray against the special prosecutor. This week the Senator’s press office announced his plan to hold hearings on the Fitzgerald probe. That means interfering with an “ongoing investigation,” as the White House press secretary might say, but such considerations won’t deter the highly partisan Kansan.
These guys never learn. After going after Wilson, Plame, and even Matt Cooper, do they really think smearing Fitzgerald is the appropriate next step? Alas, the right seems to know no other way.