just say ‘no’…

Posted on Wednesday 6 February 2008


It’s starting to seem all of a piece.

Yesterday, administration officials publicly acknowledged that CIA agents, with Justice Department authorization, had waterboarded three detainees. And the administration is eager to prevent that authorization from being threatened. According to Senate Dems, the White House has refused to strike a deal on pending nominees until the Senate deals with the Justice Department official who’s authorized the use of enhanced interrogation techniques including waterboarding. For more than three years, Steven Bradbury has been the acting head of the Office of Legal Counsel, the crucial Justice Department office that has the power to issue "advance pardons," as former OLC head Jack Goldsmith put it. But Senate Democrats, because of Bradbury’s role in approving the warrantless wiretapping program and enhanced interrogation techniques that include waterboarding, have opposed White House efforts to have him confirmed and remove his acting status.

That hasn’t kept him from the job, however. It is, after all, a position that is supposed to require Senate confirmation. While Democrats, especially Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) have held firm, Bradbury has simply acted as the head of OLC. The Dems say that the administration has broken the law to keep him in the spot. Dems have returned Bradbury’s nomination four times, and over and over again, the White House has renominated him, most recently last month. And today Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and Durbin, the Senate whip, revealed that, in negotiations with the White House late last year before the Christmas holiday, the President refused to strike a deal on nominees unless Reid allowed him to recess appoint Bradbury. Reid said he’d offered to confirm 84 of the pending nominees, but the White House said no dice. From Reid’s remarks on the floor earlier today: "He said that unless I would agree to allow him to recess appoint Steven Bradbury, he wouldn’t make a deal – he didn’t care if that meant no one got confirmed. He was willing to forgo the 84-plus nominees and the offers of recess appointments if he couldn’t install Mr. Bradbury."
As Paul Kiel says, "It’s starting to seem all of a piece." The Administration is in full cover-their-ass mode keeping Steven Bradbury in place. Anyone else in that job will see all the decisions they’ve made, react with horror, and reverse them [or expose them]. The admissions about waterboarding, acknowledging the secret camp at Gitmo, the Attorney General’s stonewalling Congress, the insistance on keeping Steven Bradbury in the OLC – the Administration is positioning itself to minimize reprisals if what they’ve done ever reaches the light of day without their being in control of things.

I hope the Senate stands firm and that Durbin has his day with the Judicial Committee. There’s no reason to let Bush bully his way through on this issue. So his nominations are on hold. Too bad. I say stand firm and have no recesses between now and Bush’s leaving office. I say start legal proceedings against Steven Bradbury for occupying that office illegaly. I say cooperation or deal cutting with Bush is at an end. He is acting in bad faith, trying to say that Senate confirmation isn’t valid, and covering up a sea of misdeeds. Let Bush, Cheney, Fratto, Perino rant all they want. No one really cares what they say anymore anyway, even their supporters.

Frankly, it’s fine with me if Bush makes a big deal about all of this secrecy and legal manipulation that has to do with F.I.S.A., Gitmo, and Torture. What they are risking is exposing stuff they’re trying to hide. Why not stonewall the Administration and bring it all out into the open? That’s what happened with their U.S. Attorney Plan. Just hold hearing after hearing and watch the rats jump ship. If we’re lucky, this whole process of legal decision making will finally come out – John Yoo, David Addington, Alberto Gonzales, Torture, spying, Habaes Corpus, foreign prisons, and who knows what else…

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