President Bush bypassed the Senate and appointed John Bolton as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Monday over the protests of Senate Democrats who complained he was abusive and would hurt U.S. credibility.
“This post is too important to leave vacant any longer, especially during a war and a vital debate about U.N. reform. So today I’ve used my constitutional authority to appoint John Bolton as America’s ambassador to the United Nations,” Bush said during a White House Roosevelt Room ceremony.
It fits into the Bush pattern so well — the bigger the lie, the bigger the promotion.
It’s hard not to love the justification about this being “too important [a post] to leave vacant any longer.” Last week, when the Senate was in session, it was just kind-of important. But now that Congress is in recess, Bush can wait no more. What a remarkable coincidence.
Also keep in mind, this is not just an instance of the president sending a clearly unqualified nominee to the United Nations to represent all of us on the world stage, it’s also another example of the Bush White House circumventing Congress whenever he feels like it. As Trent Lott (R-Miss.) said recently, “I do think it’s a little bit of a thumbing of the nose at the Senate, which will cause you more problems down the road. We are a co-equal branch; he doesn’t get to make his choices in a vacuum.”
Bush apparently disagrees. He can do what he wants, when he wants. Congress isn’t a co-equal branch, it’s a nuisance.
And this morning might also be a good time to remind folks that Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) has said that that a Bolton recess appointment “would weaken not only Mr. Bolton but also the United States.”
Update: C&L reminds me, now that Bolton has been appointed, no one should forget his tirade against the institution in which he now serves.