Monday, November 13, 2006

Congress: Trouble ahead

Well, that feeling of elation was great while it lasted. We now see troubling signs that, instead of impeachment hearings, two years of "controlled" congressional investigations may ensue.

Alcee Hastings: As mentioned earlier, Nancy Pelosi does not get along with Jane Harman, who wants to head the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. Instead, that important job seems destined for Alcee Hastings, a darling of the Congressional Black Caucus. Alas, Hastings has a troubling past:
While a federal judge in Florida -- and only two years after being appointed to the bench by President Jimmy Carter -- Hastings was charged with accepting a $150,000 bribe in exchange for giving a lenient sentence to two men charged and convicted of racketeering.

He was acquitted of the charge of bribery in a Miami court after an alleged accomplice went to prison rather than testify against him. But in 1989 the Democratic-controlled House took a look at the evidence and impeached Hastings for bribery and perjury by a 413-3 vote. The Senate -- also Democratic controlled -- convicted him on eight articles of impeachment and removed him from the bench. Pelosi voted for Hastings' impeachment.
Harman may have been too chummy with the Republicans, but she has done good work on the Duke Cunningham bribery scandal -- which is, in its depths, an intelligence scandal. The task of following that line of investigation to its final destination should not go to someone who himself has a history of bribery.

Hastings has claimed that the charges against him resulted from racism. No less a figure than John Conyers has called him on that bullshit.

If you read enough "true life" spy literature, you'll occasionally encounter statements by CIA alumni who openly brag that the intel community controls the congressional oversight panels. That history must stop here and now. I don't know if Harman is the right person, but Hastings is certainly the wrong one.

Joseph Lieberman: By making noises about a party switch, this Connecti-cunt has positioned himself to get whatever he damn well pleases from the Democratic leadership. And what pleases him is to chair the Senate's Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.

This is precisely the wrong position for Lieberman. Is he going to uncover security lapses? Will he find dirt on an administration which allowed him to keep his job? Will he get at the truth of 9/11? I think not.

Obviously, the Bushites abandoned their own candidate in CT in order to put Lieberman in a position where he could offer cover. In short: Joe and Karl cut a deal.

Although I tend toward political realism, this is one case in which I might have advised the Democratic leadership to hand Joe Lieberman a small note with two simple words written on it: Screw and you. Boot the bastard out the back door with a donkey's hoof-print on his backside, and let him crawl through the final six years of his political life as an impotent and despised figure. Even control of the Senate isn't prize enough to justify tolerating that vile traitor.

A divided Congress might be best during the next two years. If we don't get the impeachable goods on the Bushies -- and it now looks as though we may not -- we'll find it useful to have someone to blame.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm sure it's been said, Lieberman may have pulled the Rovian 2006 party-switch game that we saw hints of everywhere. Steele in MD may get a prize too with his flyers.

I'm hoping that any number of honest investigations will pull enough crap out of the mud to make an impeach impossible to ignore.

I'd start out the same way and not make it the sole goal at the outset - there are a lot of elements that need to be brought to the boil. First, put on the brakes. Then align the steering wheel. Then give it gas. Then floor it.

At any rate, Pelosi can lead correctly or not, another judgment day will come. The war has been illegal since day one.

Miss P.

Anonymous said...

Sigh. That sound you hear? Is the clatter of that shoe upon the floor I have been anticipating. But this?

"First, put on the brakes. Then align the steering wheel. Then give it gas. Then floor it."

Is hillarious. Well played, Ms. P. Well played.

Anonymous said...

You put it much more colorfully that I could, Joseph, but I couldn't agree more. LIEberman is one of the most cowardly, despicable players in this sorry drama. Reid should have stripped him of all commitees - everything -the moment he formally denounced his own Party. Why didn't this happen? Where's the political prgamatism in having a pompous, whining, Zionist traitor at the table? I hope future historians explore these questions in greater depth, because I don't hear anyone in the new democratic Senate asking them now.

I think the deal with Rove was actually cut in 2000 when he agreed to tip the election by pulling critical punches during the campaign. It's not like LIEberman is the most telegenic candidate, but a comparison of his "debate" with Dick vs the one with Lamont is very telling.

Anonymous said...

Sorry - above post from me,
Kim in PA