This pretty much sums up the Alberto Gonzales affair. The Dem's win again. What else is new and who will be next?
The Mob Wins Alberto Gonzales
became intimately familiar with what departing White House adviser Karl
Rove calls "the mob" -- the howling mass of Democratic members of
Congress, bloggers and media commentators who despise all things Bush.
His tenure as attorney general, and now his departure, represent a
triumph for the mob. The mob doesn't win only when it chases a
target from office. It also scores a subtle victory when it forces the
administration to keep in office an ineffectual or politically wounded
official to demonstrate that it won't get pushed around by its frenzied
detractors. Thus, Gonzales remained attorney general long after
everyone but President Bush had decided that he was ill-suited for the
job. The administration suffered months of unnecessary embarrassment as
it stuck by Gonzales on the theory that giving in to the mob would be
worse -- only to see Gonzales resign anyway.
Gonzales never should have been selected as attorney general in the
first place. His appointment speaks to a sentimentality on Bush's part.
He loved Gonzales' story of growing up with parents who were migrant
workers who never finished elementary school, then his going on to
graduate from Harvard Law School. Bush trusted and liked him, and that
-- as happened with other members of his Texas inner circle -- blinded
him to his friend's limitations.
Little did Bush realize the disservice he had done Gonzales. When the
controversy broke over the entirely defensible firings of eight U.S.
attorneys, Gonzales couldn't defend them, repeatedly victimized by his
own carelessness with language and facts. His explanation of how an
internal administration fight went down concerning the legality of a
National Security Agency surveillance program was better, but still
fuzzy enough for congressional Democrats to smear him as a perjurer.
Besides its impulse not to validate critics, the administration held on
to Gonzales for fear of the difficulty of getting a replacement
confirmed. Congressional Democrats reacted to his departure as if it
were part of a cover-up of whatever vague crime they believe was
committed at the Department of Justice. They will seek to exert the
maximum possible concessions from the White House for the release of
documents related to the firings and the NSA program in return for
confirming a new attorney general.
The administration should do what it should have done all along --
nominate the most capable lawyer it can find and trust that the
strength of its case will eventually win out, both on the merits of the
controversies left over from Gonzales and the document fights. Hiring
and firing U.S. attorneys is a core executive function over which
Congress has no say and limited legitimate oversight function. As for
the NSA program, Congress has validated the heart of it in a temporary
law passed this past month, and the administration is on strong
political grounds defending it.
Perhaps Congress won't relent, but if the nominee is obviously
qualified and can joust effectively with his tormentors, perhaps the
mob will be embarrassed for once instead of the administration. In any
case, there could be worse things than keeping Solicitor General Paul
Clement in the top job; he is slated to become acting attorney general
and is widely considered one of the smartest people in government.
The Gonzales case is sad all around: for what happened to the
reputation of a decent man over-matched by his responsibilities; for
the distraction at a crucial department of government; and for the
blood-lust that masquerades as political opposition in Washington. But
it's never very edifying when the mob wins.
By Rich Lowry
Monday, August 27, 2007
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