Administration is still purging those who aren’t ‘loyal Bushies’

The U.S. Attorney Purge scandal may be over, but the Bush administration hasn’t changed its habit of ridding itself of those guilty of independent thinking.

The battle over dioxin contamination in this economically stressed region [of Michigan] had been raging for years when a top Bush administration official turned up the pressure on Dow Chemical to clean it up.

On Thursday, following months of internal bickering over Mary Gade’s interactions with Dow, the administration forced her to quit as head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Midwest office, based in Chicago.

Gade told the Tribune she resigned after two aides to national EPA administrator Stephen Johnson took away her powers as regional administrator and told her to quit or be fired by June 1.

We’ve learned quite a bit in recent days about the White House interfering with EPA regulations on dioxin contamination, but it’s especially bold, even for the Bush gang, to fire the one career official who was looking out for the public’s interests.

For the past year, Gade has been locked in a heated dispute with Dow about long-delayed plans to clean up dioxin-saturated soil and sediment that extends 50 miles beyond its Midland, Mich., plant into Saginaw Bay and Lake Huron. […]

Though regional EPA administrators typically have wide latitude to enforce environmental laws, Gade drew fire from officials in Washington last month after she sent contractors to test soil in a Saginaw neighborhood where Dow had found high dioxin levels.

She said top lieutenants to Stephen Johnson, the national EPA administrator, repeatedly questioned her aggressive action against Dow, which long ago acknowledged it is responsible for the dioxin contamination but has resisted federal and state involvement in cleanup plans.

The closer one looks at this, the more offensive it appears.

Gade isn’t some Greenpeace activist who snuck into a key EPA role; she was a corporate attorney who became head of the EPA’s Midwest office after having represented big companies like Dow against environmental regulators. She was even a Bush-backing Republican in 2000. The administration probably expected her to toe the party line.

Instead, she tackled toxic pollutants — and despite sterling performance evaluations, she was fired.

And yes, this sounds familiar.

The Wonk Room has previously described Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Stephen L. Johnson as “the environment’s Alberto Gonzales.” After years of scandal as White House Counsel and Attorney General, Gonzales finally resigned after it was revealed that numerous U.S. attorneys were fired without cause under his watch.

Now it seems the EPA is following the Department of Justice’s efforts to rid itself of staffers who are not “loyal Bushies.”

Michigan Environmental Council President Lana Pollack called Gade a “woman of unquestioned credentials and integrity who was doing her job enforcing our environmental laws.”

In this administration, that’s not a compliment.

The scary part is that by making it so difficult for Democrats to remain in civil service jobs the Bush administration is going to make the civil service that President Obama inherits a mess.

The civil service will have far more right wing nut cases that can’t be fired because the law, which Bush ignored, forbids it.

We are going to be living with those nutjobs for a long time.

  • Republican’ts believe that Government is inherently incompetent. And thus, it is their goal in life to achieve incompetent Government.

    It’s funny that they fired the ex polluter’s lawyer for being too hard on the polluter.

  • They have to get all those who aren’t “loyal bushies” out – without another stolen election in 2008, there will be changes – everyone knows this.

    GREAT CRIMES DEMAND EVEN MORE CRIMINALITY – so for “self-preservation”, they must ensure that the final year has only those willing to enable, cover-up, and provide distractions for the final looting.

    If you think the last 7 years are bad, you just wait to see what they are planning next.

  • lance – please, this gets so old. The wholesale looting of the federal treasury, corruption, treason, war-crimes, and crimes against humanity have ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with competence/incompetence.

    To those that are raking in cash from the federal treasury far beyond avarice – this is EXTREMELY competent government. The memes you mention (probably in jest) are just meant to enable the crony capitalism that the repugs have always stood for.

    Those that continue to frame it in this way are part of the problem, ensuing that they can hid behind these lies to keep the criminality rolling.

  • My uncle used to work at one of those Dow plants. He would test the water downstream, which was invariably contaminated. My mother lived nearby. Out of four children, she had a daughter with Down’s Syndrome and two other kids with birth defects. Coincidence? Nobody could possibly know for sure.

    But it would still be nice if chemical companies were forced to do long-term tests on the thousands of new chemicals they introduce to our environment every year. I’d appreciate it if in the future we could learn from mistakes and prevent these types of pollution. It seems that big business supporters like Bush aren’t interested.

    Note: I am not the child with Down’s Syndrome.

  • The Wonk Room has previously described Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Stephen L. Johnson as “the environment’s Alberto Gonzales.”

    His failure to publish the EPA regulations on the emissions of greenhouse gases for the past 18 months – despite this Supreme Court telling him the EPA does indeed have the authority to do so – which he then uses to block state regulations of these gases under their Clean air Act exemptions, claiming that the Federal government is “studying” these regulations and that “premature regulation” would create a “patchwork of regulation” that would harm industry.

    Neil said: The scary part is that by making it so difficult for Democrats to remain in civil service jobs the Bush administration is going to make the civil service that President Obama inherits a mess.

    Actually, not that hard. You assign everyone who was hired during the Bush years to jobs where they have no hand in making decisions (even if it means sitting them in the cafeteria and telling them to “watch for signs of the coming ice age”). It’s not hard to find the good folks – they’ll be the ones outing the “sleeper agents.” You then use the methods that have existed in Civil Service since long before Bush to create a situation that leads to “voluntary separation.” It just requires an awareness at the outset that these people really are “the enemy” and a willingness to act on that.

  • Franklin said:
    I’d appreciate it if in the future we could learn from mistakes and prevent these types of pollution. It seems that big business supporters like Bush aren’t interested.

    One of the basic principles of Republican philosophy is that human life is sacred — unless it interferes with corporate profits or tax cuts for millionaires.

    Democrats at all levels should repeat that over and over. It is outrageous enough that the corporate-controlled media can’t ignore it, and it is demonstrably true. Repeated often enough, it will start to peel conservative Christian support away from the corporations uber alles Republican party.

  • Government in the service of corporations and the wealthy is good government. Government in the service of average working people, children, the elderly, the sick, needy, and definitely government in the service of environmental protection, is incompetent. It must be drowned in the bathtub. That’s how the Bushies have changed the subject over 7+ years.

    As long as we all understand this then nothing the Bushies do in their death throes should be a surprise.

  • I read this, and it’s just another in a long string of unethical, illegal, destructive actions that this administration has taken, and that no one does a damn thing about. Wake me up when someone actually takes some action on anything, besides holding a press conference and acting outraged.

  • “Fascism would be better described as corporatism, since it is marriage between the state and business” – Benito Mussolini

    It just seemed approriate in this context..

  • Tom Cleaver said “… a willingness to act….” Like the current crop of Dems have been SO adept at dealing with this stuff.

  • neil wilson (1): The civil service will have far more right wing nut cases that can’t be fired because the law, which Bush ignored, forbids it.

    I agree. And even if they are put in the cafeteria, they still act as moles. I have a friend who works at GAO who says it’s a consistent pattern that when they “interview” departments, there are a couple young political appointees, a few of these selective young career “experts” and a few older pre-Bush experts behind them. If the appointees get called away, or if a GAO person takes a bathroom break, the older career people often take the opportunity to tell the GAO people
    where the skeletons are hidden. Meanwhile the political appointees and the “young” employees tend to be far more focused on spin and coverup, and often know very little about the subject being investigated.

  • Bring in the people that scare the crap of out whatever agency they suppose to police. Like Gore as Secretary of Energy, see if these clowns don’t start marching to a different beat.

    If HRC doesn’t decimate the party before November.

  • When you have a criminal President, and you know it, and you do nothing about it, this is what you get. Until January 2009, expect more of the same or worse.

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