Yesterday, the House [tag]Judiciary Committee[/tag] empowered Chairman John Conyers (D-Mich.) to subpoena White House aides in the [tag]prosecutor[/tag] [tag]purge[/tag] [tag]scandal[/tag]. Today, the Senate Judiciary Committee followed suit, but this time, Dems picked up a Republican vote.
A Senate panel, following the House’s lead, authorized subpoenas Thursday for White House political adviser Karl Rove and other top aides involved in the firing of federal prosecutors.
The Senate Judiciary Committee decided by voice vote to approve the subpoenas as Republicans and Democrats sparred over whether to press a showdown with President Bush over the ousters of eight U.S. attorneys.
Democrats angrily rejected Bush’s offer to grant a limited number of lawmakers private interviews with the aides with no transcript and without swearing them in. Republicans counseled restraint, but at least one, Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, backed the action.
In fact, when the committee voted to give Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) the authority to subpoena current and former White House officials, the panel voted by voice vote (instead of a roll-call vote). Grassley went out of his way to ask that the record reflect the fact that he voted “yes,” along with committee Democrats.
Note to the White House: when you start losing Republicans on these votes, the ice you’re skating on is getting thin.
Tony Snow accused critics of wanting “a Perry Mason scene where people are hot-dogging and grandstanding and trying to score political points.”
With Republicans lining up with Dems in larger numbers, that’s a tougher sell for the White House to make.
* Five congressional Republicans, including one (ostensive) presidential candidate, have joined Dems in calling for Attorney General Alberto Gonzales’ ouster.
* Grassley sided with Dems today on subpoenas, and Specter has indicated he might do the same in the future.
* A Republican leadership staffer told Roll Call yesterday, “We are not throwing ourselves on the grenade for them anymore. There’s now an attitude of ‘you created this mess, you’ve got to get yourself out of it.'”
If you watch Fox News or read right-wing blogs, there’s an effort to paint this entire ordeal as a partisan game. Dems, they say, are trying to score cheap points. At the president’s brief statement/press conference on Tuesday, he referred to the Dems’ “partisanship” five times in 10 minutes.
But there’s a growing sense that Republicans see the writing on the wall, too, and more and more of them a) recognize the seriousness of the scandal; and b) see no reason to go down with a sinking ship.
Stay tuned.