The CIA leak hitting the inner Bush circle. Tom DeLay's toothy grin as he gets his mug shot and finger prints taken. Bill Frist's blind trust leaving us with with very little trust in Bill Frist.
With one corruption scandal after another hitting the Republican party over the past year, Terry Neal has written a good op-ed in the Washington Post in regards to the cry of Washington corruption and the rule of law that helped wash in the wave known as the Republican revolution.
Now, the water has receded and things are not so pretty in paradise. It is hard to argue that one party should retain power when many of their leaders have been abusing it. It is time to clean up the mess in Washington, and that means throwing some of the corrupt Democrats out along with the corrupt Republicans. But this once over that the Republicans are attempting to do by trivializing the same crimes that helped sweep them into power is not going to cut it.
Let the Rule of Law Prevail
By Terry M. Neal
washingtonpost.com Staff Writer
Tuesday, October 25, 2005; 6:00 AM
In the 1990s, "rule of law" was hot.
In the 2000s, not so much.
Republicans, who impeached and tried to remove a president who lied about his private sex life, have now decided that the whole "rule of law" thing really isn't all it's cut out to be.
Some Republicans -- anticipating the possible indictment of top White House aides -- are launching a preemptive public relations strike that is stunning in its audacity.
Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson (R-Tex.) outlined the strategy on NBC's "Meet the Press" on Sunday, when moderator Tim Russert asked her whether White House spokesman Scott McClellan's previous denials that anyone in the administration had anything to do with the leak of covert operative Valerie Plame's name to the media lacked credibility.
"Tim, you know, I think we have to remember something here," Hutchinson admonished. "An indictment of any kind is not a guilty verdict, and I do think we have in this country the right to go to court and have due process and be innocent until proven guilty. And secondly, I certainly hope that if there is going to be an indictment that says something happened, that it is an indictment on a crime and not some perjury technicality where they couldn't indict on the crime and so they go to something just to show that their two years of investigation was not a waste of time and taxpayer dollars. So they go to something that trips someone up because they said something in the first grand jury and then maybe they found new information or they forgot something and they tried to correct that in a second grand jury.
"I think we should be very careful here, especially as we are dealing with something very public and people's lives in the public arena. I do not think we should prejudge. I think it is unfair to drag people through the newspapers week after week after week, and let's just see what the charges are. Let's tone down the rhetoric and let's make sure that if there are indictments that we don't prejudge."
So now perjury is a "technicality"?
If caution, judiciousness, respect for people's lives in the public arena are good enough for White House officials such as Karl Rove and I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, why were they not for President Clinton?
If people should only be sent to jail for a basic criminal charge that sparked an investigation in the first place, why did Martha Stewart go to jail?
Today's strategy differs quite remarkably from the 1990s, when Republicans sought to hold Clinton, Vice President Gore, first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton and their aides and advisers to the strict letter of the law, in Whitewater, Travelgate, the Chinese campaign finance scandal, and of course, the Lewinsky imbroglio.
"Rule of law!" was the rallying cry.
(Full Story)
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2 comments:
In fact, the trust is more to blame than Frist- they had no business contacting him.
Personally, I believe that if the story is true, they ought to turf him AND the trust lawyers.
Sadly, it isn't just Frist. The games are played by far too many, on both sides of the aisle.
TERM LIMITS.
agreed. Term limits.
Then again. It might make them just speed up the corruption so as to reap as many benefits as then can while they are still in office.
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