Two years ago, asked why three law-abiding ticket holders were forcibly removed from a presidential event because of their bumper sticker, then-White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan said a “volunteer” was responsible. A few weeks later, after McClellan had a chance to glean more information about the incident, he added, “Now, in terms of this issue, my understanding is a volunteer was concerned that these three individuals were coming to the event solely for the purpose of disrupting it.”
We now know for sure that the White House was lying.
White House staffers directed two men serving as bouncers at a 2005 Denver appearance by President Bush to eject three activists from the public event, the bouncers said under oath today.
It was the first time in the long-running controversy over the barring of the so-called “Denver Three” from the Bush event that specific White House officials have been named as having been involved in the ejection. …
According to attorneys for both sides in the lawsuit, the bouncers said that the two White House staffers directed one of the bouncers, Michael Casper, to please ask them to leave, referring to the three activists, and Casper did so.
Long-time readers may recall the story of the Denver Three. In March 2005, Denver residents Alex Young, Karen Bauer, and Leslie Weise obtained tickets from their Republican congressman to a public town hall meeting on the president’s Social Security plan. Someone working at the event noticed an anti-war bumper sticker (“No Blood For Oil”) on their car, which prompted staffers to forcibly remove the three from the presidential event, despite the fact that they hadn’t done anything wrong.
Even for a White House known for shielding the president from potential critics, this was bizarre. There are plenty of examples of people being excluded from presidential events for being Democrats. Others, because their shirts or lapel stickers were deemed ideologically unacceptable. But this was an example of American citizens getting escorted out of a public event, dealing with a public policy issue, on public property, featuring public officials, because someone didn’t like their bumper sticker.
And now we know for sure that the White House was directly responsible for this — and that White House officials lied about it.
For the Bush gang, this could get worse.
As the Denver Three’s lawsuit progresses, and as revelations like these come to public light, serious questions will get answers.
* Why were members of the White House staff responsible for removing law-abiding citizens from a public event?
* Who gave these White House staffers instructions about their official responsibilities that day?
* Does the White House have a formal policy that directs the president’s aides to evict law-abiding ticket-holders from public events? If so, who wrote it? Is viewpoint discrimination part of the policy or is this something White House staffers do on the fly?
“We found what we were looking for all along,” Martha Tierney, attorney for the Denver Three, said after the depositions. “And now our goal is to find out if this is a White house policy.”
The White House had no immediate comment on the testimony. I can’t imagine why not.