Showing posts with label Prosecutor Firing Scandal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prosecutor Firing Scandal. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

The "Do-Nothing" Congress

Here's a list of things Congress has done, or tried to do.

1.) Pass 9/11 Commission Recommendations- PASSED AND ENACTED
2.) Funding for Stem-Cell Research- VETOED
3.) Timetable for Iraq withdrawal- VETOED
4.) Raising the Minimum Wage- PASSED AND ENACTED
5.) SCHIP Reauthorization- VETOED
6.) Voting Rights for DC Representative- DIED DUE TO VETO THREAT
7.) Responsible Redeployment from Iraq Act- DIED IN SENATE
8.) Immigration Reform- KILLED BY REPUBLICANS AND CONSERVATIVE DEMOCRATS
9.) Lobbying Reform act- STILL IN THE SENATE
10.) A bill to amend chapter 35 of title 28, United States Code, to preserve the independence of United States attorneys. -PASSED AND ENACTED
11.) Animal Fighting Prohibition Enforcement Act- PASSED AND ENACTED
12.) Veterans Compensation Cost of Living Adjustment Act- STALLED IN SENATE
13.) Whistleblower Protection Enhancement Act- STALLED IN SENATE

It's so easy to forget about other things Congress has done when all we're focused on is Iraq. Personally, I thought the chances were extremely slim they would be able to end the war and impeach the President, so I wasn't betting on it. That's probably why I'm not as pissed at Congress as most people are.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Can The Dems Get 60 Seats?

It's possible.

Handicapping the latest in the 2008 Senate Races, the possibility exists for the Democrats to even make as many as 10-11 gains. It seems hard to believe, but it's entirely possible;

Former Governors Mark Warner (D-Virginia) and Jeanne Shaheen (D-New Hampshire) look poised to enter their respective states' Senate races next year. Both hold commanding leads over any potential Republican rivals, Warner over Congressman Tom Davis or former Governor Jim Gilmore and Shaheen over Incumbent Senator John Sununu, effectively making them possible lost causes for the GOP. The open seat in Colorado provides the Democrats still with their best pickup opportunity, and the freshly open seat in Nebraska increases the headaches for the Republicans should former Democratic Senator Bob Kerrey jump into the race.

Susan Collins (R-Maine) and Norm Coleman (R-Minnesota) are both facing very tough reelection campaigns in blue states, while Democrats have found a strong candidate in State House Speaker Jeff Merkley to run against Gordon Smith (R-Oregon).

That's seven seats already. Republicans may even see potentially competitive races in North Carolina (Elizabeth Dole) and Alaska (Ted Stevens), the latter of whom is showered in scandal. The heat may have died down over the Attorney Firing Scandal since Alberto Gonzales resigned, but Democrats don't look to let Pete Domenici (R-New Mexico) forget about it.

And then there's Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky), who may face a strong challenger in Kentucky Attorney General Greg Stumbo or Lexington Congressman Ben Chandler.

That's 11 seats...in the unlikely scenario the Democrats sweep them all, that would give them an astonishing 62 seats, a majority unheard of since the 1970's, and even should they loose their two vulnerable seats in Louisiana and South Dakota, Democrats would still have 60...enough to make their majority filibuster proof.

Thursday, August 2, 2007

20 Democrats Cosponser Gonzales Impeachment

The impeachment resolution introduced by Rep. Jay Inslee (D-Washington) is gaining some support from some twenty House Democrats, not all of them liberal lions.

Currently the cosponsors include;

Rep. Mike Arcuri (D-New York)
Rep. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisconsin)
Rep. Xavier Beccera (D-California)
Rep. Shelley Berkley (D-Nevada)
Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Oregon)
Rep. Bruce Braley (D-Iowa)
Rep. Ben Chandler (D-Kentucky)
Rep. Yvette Clarke (D-New York)
Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Tennessee)
Rep. Pete DeFazio (D-Oregon)
Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minnesota)
Rep. Barney Frank (D-Massachusetts)
Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Arizona)
Rep. Darlene Hooley (D-Oregon)
Rep. Hank Johnson (D-Georgia)
Rep. Betty McCollum (D-Minnesota)
Rep. Dennis Moore (D-Kansas)
Rep. Ellen Tauscher (D-California)
Rep. Tom Udall (D-New Mexico)
Rep. Davis Wu (D-Oregon)

Monday, July 30, 2007

Gonzales To Be Impeached?

Maybe.

MSNBC just reported that a resolution seeking the impeachment of Attorney General Alberto Gonzales will be introduced by Rep. Jay Inslee (D-Washington)

Expect the Republicans to call it political theater. Expect the Democrats to move forward with the people's blessings.

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Democrats Grow Some

And are ready to take the President on.

First Democratic Senators are asking for a special prosecutor to investigate whether or not the Attorney General committed perjury when testifying before the Judiciary Committee on the firing of the eight prosecutors last fall.

Then the House Judiciary Committee issued contempt citations to Harriet Miers and Josh Bolten for refusing to show up to hearings when subpoenaed.

Now, Congress had subpoenaed Karl Rove.

The White House calls the moves pathetic and continues to use their "they're trying to kick us when we're down" excuse. Of course they are, because that's what the American people want...to kick you now that you're down you lying, chauvenstic, xenophobic, war-loving, bible-thumping, gay-bashing, fascists

Monday, June 11, 2007

The Vote Of No Confidence

Cloture fell short, as expected

the vote was 53-38-1 with 7 not voting;

Seven Republicans joined 46 Democrats to vote for cloture;

Sen. Norm Coleman (R-Minnesota)
Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine)
Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Nebraska)
Sen. Gordon Smith (R-Oregon)
Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine)
Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pennsylvania)
Sen. John Sununu (R-New Hampshire)

Yes, five of the seven are vulnerable incumbents up for reelection next year.

One "Democrat" voting against cloture; Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Connecticut)

Presidential candidates Joe Biden (D-Delaware), Chris Dodd (D-Connecticut), John McCain (R-Arizona), Sam Brownback (R-Kansas), and Barack Obama (D-Illinois) were not present to vote, as were Tom Coburn (R-Oklahoma) and of course Tim Johnson (D-South Dakota)

Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) voted Present.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

The Bush Press Confrerence

Key Things;

-If you don't listen to him, your kids will die.
-More Americans will be killed in Iraq, get used to it
-Sanctions against Iran will work, just look at how successfull they were in Iraq. (funny thing was, they were, unless you were Iraqi)
-Democrats just want to kick me around because everyone hates me. They bullying me.
-I don't know anything about this guy I'm talking about, except that he was born in Mexico, but he's great.

I'm still waiting for the one line that will restore my respect in this President...this one;

"I've screwed this war up so bad, I'm sorry, but I bungled it so bad, that we're stuck there in Iraq for a good long time."

That's all I want to hear from him

Monday, May 21, 2007

Bush Still Defends Gonzales

You can't blame him.

In Bush's world, there's nothing inherently morally questionable about using Executive branch departments, meant to serve the entire American public, to serve the interests of the Republican Party, at least not nearly as immoral as, you know, being gay.

Wake up, this is the view of America the world is seeing people!

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Gonzales In This Last Days

The Washington Post says Attorney General Alberto Gonzales will likely resign very soon to avoid what would likely be a successfull no-confidence vote in both Houses of Congress.

How soon? Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pennsylvania) says a no-confidence vote may be held this week before the Memorial Day break.

I still have money riding that Gonzales won't last to Memorial Day and it looks like I'll just make it under the wire.

Friday, May 18, 2007

Vote Of No Confidence, Part Deux

In the other House now.

Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-California) and Senator Chuck Schumer (D-New York) called yesterday for a vote of no confidence in Attorney General Alberto Gonzales in the Senate

Today, the same call was made in the House of Representatives.

Rep. Artur Davis (D-Alabama) is joining forces with Rep. Adam Schiff (D-California) to call for a vote of no confidence in the Attorney General in the other House of Congress.

The votes would merely be symbolic and meant to urge the Attorney General to step down by voicing the "will of the people" as Congress is supposed to do.

It's almost obvious it will pass in the House and likely to pass in the Senate as well. I'm still surprise Gonzales has lasted this long.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Vote Of No Confidence

They do it in parliamentary systems, so why not here?

Providing it's Constitutional...and I have yet to hear any arguments that it's not...I think the Senate should hold a vote of no confidence on Gonzales.

I'm very sure it'll succeed and force Gonzales to resign.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

McCain: Gonzales Should Resign

John McCain joins the ever growing chorus of voices calling for Alberto Gonzales to leave his job.

How loud does the chorus have to get before the Bush Administration hears it, winches and decides it's too loud to ignore?

Sunday, April 22, 2007

The Administration Of Scandal

The AP has released a fantastic list of scandals erupting from 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue at the moment;

Scooter Libby, former chief of staff to Vice President Dick Cheney was convicted of perjury and obstruction of justice in a grand jury investigation into the outing of CIA operative Valerie Plame. His trial also implicated top political adviser Karl Rove and Cheney in a campaign to discredit her husband, Iraq war critic and retired ambassador Joe Wilson. Libby, who plans an appeal, is awaiting a June 5 sentencing.

• Attorney General Alberto Gonzales is fighting to hold onto his job in the face of congressional investigations into his role in the firing of eight U.S. attorneys. Two top aides have resigned in the investigation into whether the firings were politically motivated. Emails and other evidence released by the Justice Deparment suggest that Rove played a part in the process. Other e-mails, sent on Republican party accounts, either have disappeared or were erased.

• Paul Wolfowitz, president of the World Bank and a former deputy defense secretary, acknowledged he helped arrange a large pay raise for his female companion when she was transferred to the State Department but remained on the bank payroll. The incident intensified calls at the bank for his resignation.

• J. Steven Griles, an oil and gas lobbyist who became deputy Interior Secretary J., last month became the highest-ranking Bush administration official convicted in the Jack Abramoff influence-peddling scandal, pleading guilty to obstructing justice by lying to a Senate committee about his relationship with the convicted lobbyist. Abramoff repeatedly sought Griles' intervention at Interior on behalf of Indian tribal clients.

• Former White House aide, David H. Safavian, was convicted last year of lying to government investigators about his ties to Abramoff and faces a 180-month prison sentence.

• Roger Stillwell, a former Interior Department official, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge for not reporting tickets he received from Abramoff.

• Sue Ellen Wooldridge, the top Justice Department prosecutor in the environmental division until January, bought a $980,000 beach house in South Carolina with ConocoPhillips lobbyist Donald R. Duncan and oil and gas lobbyist Griles. Soon thereafter, she signed an agreement giving the oil company more time to clean up air pollution at some of its refineries. Congressional Democrats have denounced the arrangement.

• Matteo Fontana, a Department of Education official who oversaw the student loan industry, was put on leave last week after disclosure that he owned at least $100,000 worth of stock in a student loan company.

• Claude Allen, who had been Bush's domestic policy adviser, pleaded guilty to theft in making phony returns at discount department stores while working at the White house. He was sentenced to two years of supervised probation and fined $500.

• Philip Cooney, a former American Petroleum Institute lobbyist who became chief of staff for the White House Council on Environmental Quality, acknowledged in congressional testimony earlier this year that he changed three government reports to eliminate or downplay links between greenhouse gases and global warming. He left in 2005 to work for Exxon Mobil Corp.

• Darleen Druyun, a former Air Force procurement officer, served nine months in prison in 2005 for violating federal conflict-of-interest rules in a deal to lease Boeing refueling tankers for $23 billion, despite Pentagon studies showing the tankers were unnecessary. After making the deal, she quit the government and joined Boeing.

_Eric Keroack, Bush's choice to oversee the federal family planning program, resigned from the post suddenly last month after the Massachusetts Medicaid office launched an investigation into his private practice. He had been medical director of an organization that opposes premarital sex and contraception.

• Lurita Doan, head of the General Services Administration, attended a luncheon at the agency earlier this year with other top GSA political appointees at which Scott Jennings, a top Rove aide, gave a PowerPoint demonstration on how to help Republican candidates in 2008. A congressional committee is investigating whether the remarks violated a federal law that restricts executive-branch employees from using their positions for political purposes.

• Robert W. Cobb, NASA's inspector general is under investigation on charges of ignoring safety violations in the space program. An internal administration review said he routinely tipped off department officials to internal investigations and quashed a report related to the Columbia shuttle explosion to avoid embarrassing the agency. He remains on the job. Only Bush can fire him.

• Julie MacDonald, who oversees the Fish and Wildlife Service but has no academic background in biology, overrode recommendations of agency scientists about how to protect endangered species and improperly leaked internal information to private groups, the Interior Department inspector general said.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Senator Urges Gonzales To Resign

And it's not Kennedy, Schumer or Leahy

It's Senator Tom Coburn (R-Oklahoma)...You heard right, Coburn of Oklahoma;

"The best way to put this behind us is your resignation," Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Oklahoma)

Democrats really didn't have to put more pressure on the Attorney General. Republicans were doing it for them;

"Why is your story changing?" Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa)
"Most of this is a stretch" Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina)
"I guess I'm more concerned about your recollection really." Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Alabama)



I'd say this man is toast, but I thought he'd be gone already. It looks to me like the Senate is going to beat this guy up for awhile and then let him go.

At least the Republicans are learning the art of oversight. They seemed to have forgotten that after 2001.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Gonzales Faces The Senate Tomorrow

Delayed two days, but set for tomorrow, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales goes before the Senate tomorrow to save his job.

Stay tuned for updates tomorrow.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Gonzales Testimony Delayed Till Thursday

On account of the VA Tech massacre.

I haven't been really paying attention to much else today, except for this horrible situation in Virginia.

I hope to get back to the nitty gritty of politics tomorrow or Wednesday.

Right now, we're witnessing history, and something that will likely affect the gun control debate in the future.

Sunday, April 15, 2007

NM-Sen: The Last Days Of Pete Domenici

Senator Pete Domenici (R-New Mexico) couldn't be more enravalled into this Alberto Gonzales Prosecutor scandal if he was the Attorney General himself.

This whole scandal really erupted when Senator Domenici admitted to contacting David Iglesias, the fired New Mexico federal prosecutor, about indictments against a Democratic state Senator on corruption charges, but claimed he did not pressure Iglesias or seek his ousting.

He did, apparently, seek his ousting.

As I said in a previous post, Domenici is up for reelection in one of the most volatile swing states in the country. The Republican bench is thin, thanks to Republican Congresswoman Heather Wilson's involvment in this scandal.

Democrats should be prepare for the possibility of another open Mountain State Senate seat. I don't see how Domenici runs for reelection with this on his back.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Another Day, Another Oops

I said in an earlier post that every time the administration tries to defend itself, their defense is always "we made a mistake."

Here's another example.

You know, they make sure they have all of our e-mails and phone conversations backed up over and over again, but they can't account for their records.

I am so SICK AND TIRED of hearing them say "oh, we made a mistake," AND STILL they won't admit to THEIR BIGGEST MISTAKE...Iraq!

Incompetent or Criminal, either way, they are horrible leaders.

Sunday, April 8, 2007

Gonzales' Last Days

Newt Gingrich joined the ranks of Senators John Sununu (R-New Hampshire), Gordon Smith (R-Oregon) and Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-California), Tom Tancredo (R-Colorado) and Lee Terry (R-Nebraska) in saying Gonzales should have to resign.

The GOP is leaving him to whither on the vine. He'll be gone by summer.

Saturday, March 31, 2007

Another Republican Tells Gonzales To Get Lost

Senator John Sununu (R-New Hampshire) became the first Republican in Congress to call for Gonzales to resign a few weeks ago. Now, a Republican in the House of Representatives is calling for Gonzales to resign.

It's not a liberal Republican and/or one in a swing district. It's a Republican from a very Republican state.

Rep. Lee Terry (R-Nebraska), who represents Omaha, admitted he once had faith in Gonzales, but does not have any faith in him anymore. Terry said he thought the whole scandal was a Democratic witch hunt, but that he's lost faith in the Attorney General because of his contradictory statements.

Terry's district isn't very competitive, but it could be. He defeated Democrat Jim Esch, who lagged him in fundraising 55%-45% last year. His district was the last in Nebraska to be represented by a Democrat, Peter Hoagland from 1989-1995.

Not to mention, his district is in Omaha, so the Democrats do have a bench to run against Terry.

Still, Terry's comments do give some credit to the Democrats' arguments that the Administration is hiding something.

If this was a Democratic witch hunt, well then, they actually found a witch.