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Barron’s Magazine: Congress Should Consider Bush Impeachment

 
 
Reply Sat 24 Dec, 2005 05:04 pm
Amazing editorial from a conservative business magazine.---BBB

Barron's: Congress Should Consider Impeacment…
By THOMAS G. DONLAN

AS THE YEAR WAS DRAWING TO A CLOSE, we picked up our New York Times and learned that the Bush administration has been fighting terrorism by intercepting communications in America without warrants. It was worrisome on its face, but in justifying their actions, officials have made a bad situation much worse: Administration lawyers and the president himself have tortured the Constitution and extracted a suspension of the separation of powers.

It was not a shock to learn that shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks, President Bush authorized the National Security Agency to conduct intercepts of international phone calls to and from the United States. The 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act permits the government to gather the foreign communications of people in the U.S. -- without a warrant if quick action is important. But the law requires that, within 72 hours, investigators must go to a special secret court for a retroactive warrant.

The USA Patriot Act permits some exceptions to its general rules about warrants for wiretaps and searches, including a 15-day exception for searches in time of war. And there may be a controlling legal authority in the Sept. 14, 2001, congressional resolution that authorized the president to go after terrorists and use all necessary and appropriate force. It was not a declaration of war in a constitutional sense, but it may have been close enough for government work.

Certainly, there was an emergency need after the Sept. 11 attacks to sweep up as much information as possible about the chances of another terrorist attack. But a 72-hour emergency or a 15-day emergency doesn't last four years.

In that time, Congress has extensively debated the rules on wiretaps and other forms of domestic surveillance. Administration officials have spent many hours before many committees urging lawmakers to provide them with great latitude. Congress acted, and the president signed.
Now the president and his lawyers are claiming that they have greater latitude. They say that neither the USA Patriot Act nor the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act actually sets the real boundary. The administration is saying the president has unlimited authority to order wiretaps in the pursuit of foreign terrorists, and that the Congress has no power to overrule him.

"We also believe the president has the inherent authority under the Constitution, as commander-in-chief, to engage in this kind of activity," said Attorney General Alberto Gonzales. The Department of Justice made a similar assertion as far back as 2002, saying in a legal brief: "The Constitution vests in the president inherent authority to conduct warrantless intelligence surveillance (electronic or otherwise) of foreign powers or their agents, and Congress cannot by statute extinguish that Constitutional authority." Gonzales last week declined to declassify relevant legal reviews made by the Department of Justice.

Perhaps they were researched in a Star Chamber? Putting the president above the Congress is an invitation to tyranny. The president has no powers except those specified in the Constitution and those enacted by law. President Bush is stretching the power of commander-in-chief of the Army and Navy by indicating that he can order the military and its agencies, such as the National Security Agency, to do whatever furthers the defense of the country from terrorists, regardless of whether actual force is involved.

Surely the "strict constructionists" on the Supreme Court and the federal judiciary eventually will point out what a stretch this is. The most important presidential responsibility under Article II is that he must "take care that the laws be faithfully executed." That includes following the requirements of laws that limit executive power. There's not much fidelity in an executive who debates and lobbies Congress to shape a law to his liking and then goes beyond its writ.

Willful disregard of a law is potentially an impeachable offense. It is at least as impeachable as having a sexual escapade under the Oval Office desk and lying about it later. The members of the House Judiciary Committee who staged the impeachment of President Clinton ought to be as outraged at this situation. They ought to investigate it, consider it carefully and report either a bill that would change the wiretap laws to suit the president or a bill of impeachment.

It is important to be clear that an impeachment case, if it comes to that, would not be about wiretapping, or about a possible Constitutional right not to be wiretapped. It would be about the power of Congress to set wiretapping rules by law, and it is about the obligation of the president to follow the rules in the Acts that he and his predecessors signed into law.
Some ancillary responsibility, however, must be attached to those members of the House and Senate who were informed, inadequately, about the wiretapping and did nothing to regulate it.

Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV, Democrat of West Virginia, told Vice President Dick Cheney in 2003 that he was "unable to fully evaluate, much less endorse these activities." But the senator was so respectful of the administration's injunction of secrecy that he wrote it out in longhand rather than give it to someone to type. Only last week, after the cat was out of the bag, did he do what he should have done in 2003 -- make his misgivings public and demand more information.

Published reports quote sources saying that 14 members of Congress were notified of the wiretapping. If some had misgivings, apparently they were scared of being called names, as the president did last week when he said: "It was a shameful act for someone to disclose this very important program in a time of war. The fact that we're discussing this program is helping the enemy."

Wrong. If we don't discuss the program and the lack of authority for it, we are meeting the enemy -- in the mirror.

Editorial Page Editor THOMAS G. DONLAN receives e-mail at [email protected].
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talk72000
 
  1  
Reply Sun 25 Dec, 2005 02:21 am
GWB = George Wars Blindly, is the kind of leader who think he is above the nation. The treasury is his personal piggy bank, the soldiers to win his manhood, the citizens to obey his commands and the land his playground.
0 Replies
 
Brandon9000
 
  1  
Reply Sun 25 Dec, 2005 08:00 am
Anyone who thinks Bush could be impeached, is living in a fantasyland, unless he does something impeachable in the future. I think it's great that you'll waste your energy on this nonsense instead of readying your own platform and candidates for the next election.
0 Replies
 
lmur
 
  1  
Reply Sun 25 Dec, 2005 08:11 am
HO HO HO

Merry Christmas,everyone
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Sun 25 Dec, 2005 09:13 am
Brandon
Brandon9000 wrote:
Anyone who thinks Bush could be impeached, is living in a fantasyland, unless he does something impeachable in the future. I think it's great that you'll waste your energy on this nonsense instead of readying your own platform and candidates for the next election.


There are several problems with the impeachment idea. First, Congress is controlled by the Republicans. They rarely eat their own. Second, removing George Bush would leave us with Dick Cheney, who is worse than Bush. Even if both Bush and Cheney were impeached, Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert would become president. While Hastert is not as evil and the twin devils, I'm not sure he is presidential material. But, like Harry Truman, we might be surprised.

This all changes if the Democrats control the House of Representatives after the 2006 election, which is doubtful. It's possible in the Senate, but impeachment must be authorized by the House of Representatives.

It's up to the Republicans in power to put the breaks on their president and vice president for the good of the country and all of it's citizens. The Democrats don't have the power to do it.

Are there any Republicans out there with the integrity and love of country to do the right thing?

BBB
0 Replies
 
au1929
 
  1  
Reply Sun 25 Dec, 2005 09:32 am
Brandon9000
The only thing keeping Herr Bush from impeachment is a republican congress. He has torn the constitution, the one he called just a piece of paper, into bits. I suppose the only thing impeachable by a republican congress is sexual misconduct and a democrat
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Reply Sun 25 Dec, 2005 09:52 am
Brandon9000 wrote:
Anyone who thinks Bush could be impeached, is living in a fantasyland, unless he does something impeachable in the future. I think it's great that you'll waste your energy on this nonsense instead of readying your own platform and candidates for the next election.


You have some information that the Barron's editorialist has anything to do with setting DNC policy?

The impeachment discussion is significant in a number of ways.

First, it has arisen from various quarters, many having nothing to do with Democrat strategy or initiation (as with the editorial above). That ought to indicate to you that there is, or may well be, substantive legal/constitutional cause to seriously consider impeachment.

Second, it has arisen when Bush is weakened, both politically and in the polls. A week before Clinton's impeachment began, even with all the ballyhoo long preceding that impeachment, his approval rating was at 73. Bush's polling in November put him at 37% which, as it happens, is precisely the percentage of Russians who presently approve of the direction Russia took under Stalin.

Third, impeachment does not have to occur (hindered by a Republican dominated congress) for great electoral damage to be suffered by Bush/Republicans simply from these negative issues being aired broadly.
0 Replies
 
rodeman
 
  1  
Reply Mon 26 Dec, 2005 01:52 pm
I thought you could only be impeached for a lapse in moral judgement, not breaking the law or shredding the Constitution.
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Tue 24 Jan, 2006 10:17 am
Impeachment hearings: The White House prepares for the worst
Issue Date: January 23-29, 2006, Posted On: 1/23/2006
Impeachment hearings: The White House prepares for the worst

The Bush administration is bracing for impeachment hearings in Congress.

"A coalition in Congress is being formed to support impeachment," an administration source said.

Sources said a prelude to the impeachment process could begin with hearings by the Senate Judiciary Committee in February. They said the hearings would focus on the secret electronic surveillance program and whether Mr. Bush violated the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

Administration sources said the charges are expected to include false reports to Congress as well as Mr. Bush's authorization of the National Security Agency to engage in electronic surveillance inside the United States without a court warrant. This included the monitoring of overseas telephone calls and e-mail traffic to and from people living in the United States without requisite permission from a secret court.

Sources said the probe to determine whether the president violated the law will include Republicans, but that they may not be aware they could be helping to lay the groundwork for a Democratic impeachment campaign against Mr. Bush.

"Our arithmetic shows that a majority of the committee could vote against the president," the source said. "If we work hard, there could be a tie."

The law limits the government surveillance to no more than 72 hours without a court warrant. The president, citing his constitutional war powers, has pledged to continue wiretaps without a warrant.

The hearings would be accompanied by several lawsuits against the administration connected to the surveillance program. At the same time, the Electronic Privacy Information Center has filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit that demands information about the NSA spying.

Sen. Arlen Specter, Senate Judiciary Committee chairman and Pennsylvania Republican, has acknowledged that the hearings could conclude with a vote of whether Mr. Bush violated the law. Mr. Specter, a critic of the administration's surveillance program, stressed that, although he would not seek it, impeachment is a possible outcome.

"Impeachment is a remedy," Mr. Specter said on Jan. 15. "After impeachment, you could have a criminal prosecution. But the principal remedy under our society is to pay a political price."

Mr. Specter and other senior members of the committee have been told by legal constitutional experts that Mr. Bush did not have the authority to authorize unlimited secret electronic surveillance. Another leading Republican who has rejected the administration's argument is Sen. Sam Brownback of Kansas.

On Jan. 16, former Vice President Al Gore set the tone for impeachment hearings against Mr. Bush by accusing the president of lying to the American people. Mr. Gore, who lost the 2000 election to Mr. Bush, accused the president of "indifference" to the Constitution and urged a serious congressional investigation. He said the administration decided to break the law after Congress refused to change the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

"A president who breaks the law is a threat to the very structure of our government," Mr. Gore said.

"I call upon members of Congress in both parties to uphold your oath of office and defend the Constitution," he said. "Stop going along to get along. Start acting like the independent and co-equal branch of American government that you are supposed to be under the constitution of our country."

Impeachment proponents in Congress have been bolstered by a memorandum by the Congressional Research Service on Jan. 6. CRS, which is the research arm of Congress, asserted in a report by national security specialist Alfred Cumming that the amended 1947 law requires the president to keep all members of the House and Senate intelligence committees "fully and currently informed" of a domestic surveillance effort. It was the second CRS report in less than a month that questioned the administration's domestic surveillance program.

The latest CRS report said Mr. Bush should have briefed the intelligence committees in the House and Senate. The report said covert programs must be reported to House and Senate leaders as well as the chairs of the intelligence panels, termed the "Gang of Eight."

Administration sources said Mr. Bush would wage a vigorous defense of electronic surveillance and other controversial measures enacted after 9/11. They said the president would begin with pressure on Republican members of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Mr. Bush would then point to security measures taken by the former administration of President Bill Clinton.

"The argument is that the American people will never forgive any public official who knowingly hurts national security," an administration source said. "We will tell the American people that while we have done everything we can to protect them, our policies are being endangered by a hypocritical Congress."
0 Replies
 
au1929
 
  1  
Reply Fri 3 Mar, 2006 08:00 am
ST. PAUL, Minnesota These are troubling times for all of us who love the United States, as surely we all do, even the satirists. You may poke fun at your mother, but if she is belittled by others it burns your bacon. 
A blowhard French journalist writes a book about America that is full of arrogant stupidity, and you want to let the air out of him and mail him home flat. 
You hear young people talk about America as if it's all over, and you trust that this is only them talking tough. 
And then you read the paper and realize America is led by a man who isn't paying attention, and you hope that somebody will poke him. Or put a sign on his desk that says, "Try Much Harder." 
Do we need to impeach him to bring some focus to this man's life? The man was lost and then he was found and now he's more lost than ever, plus being blind. 
The Feb. 27 issue of The New Yorker carries an article by Jane Mayer about a loyal conservative Republican and U.S. Navy lawyer, Albert Mora, and his resistance to the torture of prisoners at Guantánamo Bay. 
From within the Pentagon bureaucracy, he did battle against Donald Rumsfeld and John Yoo at the Justice Department and shadowy figures taking orders from Dick (Gunner) Cheney, arguing America had ratified the Geneva Convention that forbids cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment of prisoners, and so it has the force of law. They seemed to be arguing that the president has the right to order prisoners to be tortured. 
One such prisoner, Mohammed al-Qahtani, was held naked in isolation under bright lights for months, threatened by dogs, subjected to unbearable noise volumes and otherwise abused, so that he begged to be allowed to kill himself. 
When the Senate approved the Torture Convention in 1994, it defined torture as an act "specifically intended to inflict severe physical or mental pain or suffering." Is the law a law or is it a piece of toast? 
Wiretap surveillance of Americans without a warrant? Great. Go for it. 
How about turning over American ports to a country more closely tied to 9/11 than Saddam Hussein was? Fine by me. No problem. 
And what about the war in Iraq? Hey, you're doing a heck of a job, Brownie. No need to tweak a thing. 
And your blue button-down shirt - it's you. 
But torture is something else. When Americans start pulling people's fingernails out with pliers and poking lighted cigarettes into their palms, then we need to come back to basic values. 
Most people agree with this, and in a democracy that puts the torturers in a delicate position. They must make sure to destroy their e-mails and have subordinates who will take the fall. 
Because it is impossible to keep torture secret. It goes against the American grain and it eats at the conscience of even the most disciplined, and in the end the truth will come out. 
It is coming out now. 
According to the leaders of the bipartisan 9/11 Commission, America is practically as vulnerable today as it was on 9/10. Its seaports are wide open, its airspace is not secure (except for Washington), and little has been done about securing the nuclear bomb materials lying around in the world. 
They give the administration Ds and Fs in most categories of defending against terrorist attack. 
Our adventure in Iraq, at a cost of trillions, has brought that country to the verge of civil war while earning us more enemies than ever before. And tax money earmarked for security is being dumped into pork barrel projects anywhere somebody wants their own SWAT team. 
Detonation of a nuclear bomb within our borders - pick any big city - is a real possibility, as much so now as five years ago. Meanwhile, many Democrats have conceded the very subject of security and positioned themselves as Guardians of Our Forests and Benefactors of Waifs and Owls, neglecting the most basic job of government, which is to defend the country. 
We might rather be comedians or daddies or flamenco dancers, but we must attend to first things. 
The peaceful lagoon that is the White House is designed for the comfort of a vulnerable man. Perfectly understandable, but not what is needed now. 
The Constitution provides a simple ultimate way to hold him to account for war crimes and the failure to attend to the country's defense. 
Impeach him and let the Senate hear the evidence.  
(Garrison Keillor is the host of the American public-radio show "A Prairie Home Companion." This article was distributed by Tribune Media Services International.)  
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