By now, everyone has heard all about the 2004 showdown in John Ashcroft’s hospital room. What we haven’t heard much of, however, is any kind of explanation from the Bush gang as to what transpired that night.
Press Secretary Tony Snow brushed it off last week, suggesting that Ashcroft really wasn’t that sick, and that Comey’s version of events were just “one side” of the story (he wouldn’t give the other side). A few days later, Snow’s deputy, Tony Fratto, wouldn’t even go that far, refusing to answer any questions about the confrontation. At one point, Fratto said the White House won’t even concede that the Card/Gonzales/Comey meeting occurred at all.
Newsweek fleshed out a few more details in its new issue.
After the incident, there were recriminations over what Comey portrayed as an attempt by Bush’s top lawyer and chief of staff to “take advantage” of a very ill man. Comey didn’t tell the Senate panel that the bad feelings were stoked even more the next morning when White House officials explained the hospital visit by saying Gonzales and Card were unaware that Comey was acting A.G. (and therefore the only person authorized to sign off on the surveillance program), according to a former senior DOJ official who requested anonymity talking about internal matters. (emphasis added)
Top DOJ officials were furious, the source said. Just days earlier, Justice’s chief spokesman had publicly said Comey would serve as “head of the Justice Department” while Ashcroft was ill. Justice officials had also faxed over a document to the White House informing officials of this. When a Gonzales aide claimed the counsel’s office could find no record of it, DOJ officials dug out a receipt showing the fax had been received. “People were disgusted as much as livid,” said the DOJ official. “It was just the dishonesty of it.” A Gonzales aide at the time (who asked not to be ID’d talking about internal matters) said there was a “miscommunication” and “genuine confusion” over who was in charge.
Oh, you mean when the Attorney General is incapacitated due to a serious health problem, the Deputy Attorney General temporarily serves in his place? Who would have ever even imagined such an inconceivable scenario? How could the White House Chief of Staff and WH Counsel possibly be expected to think of such a far-fetched idea?
Please. There’s fibbing, there’s lying, and there’s this explanation.
Indeed, this explanation is so transparently stupid, I’m genuinely surprised administration officials would repeat it, out loud, to a reporter at a major news outlet. To hear them tell it, Card and Gonzales needed to try and take advantage of an ailing man in intensive care because no one else had any authority at the Justice Department. Ask a 12-year-old kid who’s in charge of the Justice Department if the #1 guy is sick and can’t serve. Chances are, she’ll say, “The #2 guy.” Somehow, this eluded two of the president’s top aides? I don’t think so.
In other words, this is the explanation: it’s not that Card and Gonzales were trying to circumvent the rule of law, it’s that they have no idea how the executive branch of government works. That’s not my accusation; that’s their defense.
Digby summarized this nicely:
This was a typical Bush/Cheney/Rove style power play. They tried a completely unethical end-run that didn’t work and then they attempted to make the Justice Department swallow a lie that was so lame that it could only have been a loyalty test. How infuriating.
Eugene Robinson’s take is also worth reading:
The image I can’t get out of my head is of Alberto Gonzales carrying a document for Ashcroft’s signature into the man’s hospital room, attempting a sneaky end-run around the deputy whom Ashcroft left in charge of the department, knowing full well that Ashcroft was seriously ill and almost certainly medicated. What did he intend to do, guide the man’s hand?
This is the attorney general of the United States, ladies and gentlemen. Heaven help us.
And this was written before the Newsweek piece with Gonzales’ explanation.