Constitutional Showdown

Ken AshfordAttorney Firings, ConstitutionLeave a Comment

It’s brewing:

The House Judiciary Committee announced yesterday that it will press toward a constitutional showdown with the Bush administration over the U.S. attorney firings scandal, even as embattled Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales vowed to stay on and "fix the problems" that have damaged the reputation and morale of the Justice Department.

John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.), chairman of the committee, said it will vote on Wednesday on contempt citations for the White House chief of staff, Joshua B. Bolten, and former White House counsel Harriet E. Miers. Both refused congressional demands for information on the dismissals after President Bush invoked executive privilege.

The move puts House Democrats on a legal collision course with the White House, which said last week that it will not allow the Justice Department to prosecute executive branch officials for being in contempt of Congress.

For those of you not paying attention to this story (of only half-paying attention), these are the bulletpoint facts:

  • Failure to appear pursuant to a subpoena is a federal crime
  • This includes subpoenae issued by Congress for their congressional investigations
  • You can appear and refuse to testify to certain questions (i.e., plead the 5th Amendment privilege, or the executive privilege, or some other privilege), but you have to appear
  • If you invoke the privilege, it has to be, you know, a bona fide reason, and it must be in response to questions that are asked; there is no such thing as a "blanket" privilege
  • Congress was investigating the Department of Justice for their (alleged) use of hiring and firing attorneys based on their political party affiliation (and/or their willingness to prosecute Democrats)
  • Congress issued to subpoenae to (among others) Joshua Bolton and Harriet Miers
  • Both refused to appear (invoking a blanket "executive privilege")
  • Failing to appear in response to a subpoena is, on its face, "contempt of Congress" — a crime
  • But the Department of Justice (the object of the investigation) is the body that prosecutes such crimes
  • The Bush Administration has said that the DOJ will not prosecute itself, nor will Bush appoint a special independent prosecutor

In other words, if there is corruption in the Department of Justice, nobody can be brought to trial or charged, because the Department of Justice is the fox guarding the henhouse.

A serious constitutional problem.  In the past, other Presidents have put partisanship aside and appointed special prosecutors.  Bush is not doing that.

So who watches the watchers?

UPDATE:  Law Professor Frank Astin says Congress doesn’t need the Executive Branch or the DOJ to enforce their own subpoenae:

Yet under historic and undisturbed law, Congress can enforce its own orders against recalcitrant witnesses without involving the executive branch and without leaving open the possibility of presidential pardon.

And a Supreme Court majority would find it hard to object in the face of two entrenched legal principles.

First is the inherent power of Congress to require testimony on matters within its legislative oversight jurisdiction.

So long as Congress is investigating issues over which it has the power to legislate, it can compel witnesses to appear and respond to questions. That power has been affirmed over and over in prosecutions for contempt.

In modern times, this congressional power has been enforced by referring contempt cases to the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia for indictment and prosecution. That, of course, is the rub. It allows the president to exercise his plenary power under the Constitution to issue pardons "for offenses against the United States."

But no law says that indictment and prosecution by the Justice Department is the exclusive means to enforce congressional prerogative.

***

Instead of referring a contempt citation to the U.S. attorney, a house of Congress can order the sergeant-at-arms to take recalcitrant witnesses into custody and have them held until they agree to cooperate — i.e., an order of civil contempt. Technically, the witness could be imprisoned somewhere in the bowels of the Capitol, but historically the sergeant-at-arms has turned defendants over to the custody of the warden of the D.C. jail.

That was what was done in the landmark 1876 case Kilbourn v. Thompson, when the Supreme Court ruled that Congress had overstepped its bounds by investigating the private activities of the defendant in a matter in which it had no jurisdiction.

That decision, however, left no doubt of Congress’s power to punish for contempt those who defy lawful investigations.

So, far from being defenseless against the president’s refusal to prosecute or the threat of presidential pardon, Congress could take into its own custody defiant administration officials who refuse to cooperate with legitimate inquiries into executive malfeasance. Those targets would have the right to seek writs of habeas corpus from the federal courts, but as long as Congress could show a legitimate need for the information it was seeking pursuant to its legislative oversight functions, it would be standing on solid legal ground.

Photosynth

Ken AshfordScience & TechnologyLeave a Comment

Using photos of oft-snapped subjects (like The Vatican) scraped from around the Web, Photosynth (based on Seadragon technology) creates breathtaking multidimensional spaces with zoom and navigation features that outstrip all expectation.

You gotta see it to believe it:

The Lesbian President

Ken AshfordPopular Culture1 Comment

24, the hit show among the rightwing, is getting a woman president for the next season.  That’s going to ruffle the neo-con feathers a bit.  And she’s a lesbian.

Okay, that character won’t be a lesbian, but the actress will be.  The female president in the next season of 24 will be played by the esteemed Cherry Jones.

Journalism News

Ken AshfordRight Wing and Inept MediaLeave a Comment

Weekly World News ending publication

While it isn’t strictly a genre publication, and it does bill itself as “The World’s Only Reliable Newspaper,” the editor has decided that this announcement does fall within SFScope’s purview:

American Media has decided to suspend publication of Weekly World News, both the print publication and the web site. No reason was given at press time, although reliable sources do tell us that management turned down at least one offer to buy the publication.

WWN devotees can always turn to Fox though…

Batboyfbi

Obstructionist GOP

Ken AshfordCongressLeave a Comment

In 2004, Americans elected a Democratic majority in Congress.  What was the GOP response?  To tie up bills, filibuster, and engage in other parliamentarian tactics to prevent reforms from even coming to a vote.

How bad is it?  Really bad.  At the present pace, the Republicans will be three times more obstructionist than any Congress in recent history.  Margaret Talev reports for McClatchey Newspapers on the GOP’s unprecedentedly frequent use of the filibuster. This chart, though, kind of says it all:

873046617_1aa6eb72d5_o

No wonder Congress is rated as so low….

Abstinence Education Report Card

Ken AshfordSex/Morality/Family ValuesLeave a Comment

It’s a D:

Experts worry nation’s on brink of teen sex surge

WASHINGTON — The long decline in sexual activity among U.S. teenagers, hailed as one of the nation’s most important social and public health successes, appears to have stalled.

After decreasing steadily and significantly for more than a decade, the percentage of teenagers having intercourse began to plateau in 2001 and has failed to budge since then, despite the intensified focus in recent years on encouraging sexual abstinence, according to a new analysis of data from a large federal survey.

The halt in the downward trend coincided with an increase in federal spending on programs focused exclusively on encouraging sexual abstinence until marriage, several experts pointed out. Congress is debating funding for such efforts, which receive about $175 million a year in federal money and have come under fire from some quarters for being ineffective.

The problem with abstinence education is that it doesn’t provide facts, which is what young adults need; it merely provides a course of action.

The Imperial Presidency And War Powers

Ken AshfordBush & Co., Constitution, IraqLeave a Comment

This op-ed in the New York Times gets it right, both morally and historically:

The nation is heading toward a constitutional showdown over the Iraq war. Congress is moving closer to passing a bill to limit or end the war, but President Bush insists Congress doesn’t have the power to do it. “I don’t think Congress ought to be running the war,” he said at a recent press conference. “I think they ought to be funding the troops.” He added magnanimously: “I’m certainly interested in their opinion.”

The war is hardly the only area where the Bush administration is trying to expand its powers beyond all legal justification. But the danger of an imperial presidency is particularly great when a president takes the nation to war, something the founders understood well. In the looming showdown, the founders and the Constitution are firmly on Congress’s side.

Given how intent the president is on expanding his authority, it is startling to recall how the Constitution’s framers viewed presidential power. They were revolutionaries who detested kings, and their great concern when they established the United States was that they not accidentally create a kingdom. To guard against it, they sharply limited presidential authority, which Edmund Randolph, a Constitutional Convention delegate and the first attorney general, called “the foetus of monarchy.”

The founders were particularly wary of giving the president power over war. They were haunted by Europe’s history of conflicts started by self-aggrandizing kings. John Jay, the first chief justice of the United States, noted in Federalist No. 4 that “absolute monarchs will often make war when their nations are to get nothing by it, but for the purposes and objects merely personal.”

Many critics of the Iraq war are reluctant to suggest that President Bush went into it in anything but good faith. But James Madison, widely known as the father of the Constitution, might have been more skeptical. “In war, the honors and emoluments of office are to be multiplied; and it is the executive patronage under which they are to be enjoyed,” he warned. “It is in war, finally, that laurels are to be gathered; and it is the executive brow they are to encircle.”

When they drafted the Constitution, Madison and his colleagues wrote their skepticism into the text. In Britain, the king had the authority to declare war, and raise and support armies, among other war powers. The framers expressly rejected this model and gave these powers not to the president, but to Congress.

The Constitution does make the president “commander in chief,” a title President Bush often invokes. But it does not have the sweeping meaning he suggests. The framers took it from the British military, which used it to denote the highest-ranking official in a theater of battle. Alexander Hamilton emphasized in Federalist No. 69 that the president would be “nothing more” than “first general and admiral,” responsible for “command and direction” of military forces.

The founders would have been astonished by President Bush’s assertion that Congress should simply write him blank checks for war. They gave Congress the power of the purse so it would have leverage to force the president to execute their laws properly. Madison described Congress’s control over spending as “the most complete and effectual weapon with which any constitution can arm the immediate representatives of the people, for obtaining a redress of every grievance, and for carrying into effect every just and salutary measure.”

The framers expected Congress to keep the president on an especially short leash on military matters. The Constitution authorizes Congress to appropriate money for an army, but prohibits appropriations for longer than two years. Hamilton explained that the limitation prevented Congress from vesting “in the executive department permanent funds for the support of an army, if they were even incautious enough to be willing to repose in it so improper a confidence.”

As opinion turns more decisively against the war, the administration is becoming ever more dismissive of Congress’s role. Last week, Under Secretary of Defense Eric Edelman brusquely turned away Senator Hillary Clinton’s questions about how the Pentagon intended to plan for withdrawal from Iraq. "Premature and public discussion of the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq reinforces enemy propaganda that the United States will abandon its allies in Iraq,” he wrote. Mr. Edelman’s response showed contempt not merely for Congress, but for the system of government the founders carefully created.

The Constitution cannot enforce itself. It is, as the constitutional scholar Edwin Corwin famously observed, an “invitation to struggle” among the branches, but the founders wisely bequeathed to Congress some powerful tools for engaging in the struggle. It is no surprise that the current debate over a deeply unpopular war is arising in the context of a Congressional spending bill. That is precisely what the founders intended.

Members of Congress should not be intimidated into thinking that they are overstepping their constitutional bounds. If the founders were looking on now, it is not Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi who would strike them as out of line, but George W. Bush, who would seem less like a president than a king.

The Full Monty: Greensboro

Ken AshfordLocal InterestLeave a Comment

Well, we’ve got two shows under out belt for the Greensboro run (not including the preview on Thursday night).

Two nice reviews — on in the Greensboro News & Record (not online apparently), and one in Yes Weekly, which you can read here.  (I’ll cut and paste below the fold).

The entire week we had been running the show for tech purposes.  It was a bit odd, having to run tech rehearsals when we had two weeks of performances under out belt.  Odd, because the energy of the audience simply wasn’t there.  All you could here was the proverbial crickets chirping.  It was, of course, necessary to do tech rehearsals, because the show was being worked for a new stage and new crew.  But it took it’s toll on an already-tired cast.

The Thursday night preview audience was small but appreciative.  It was nice to get that feedback, although it would have been nice to see more faces.  S’okay though — it’s a preview crowd.

Then something happened on Friday night.  It was a large house; just as large — if not larger — than anything we had in Winston-Salem.  But right from the start, it was clear that something was amiss.  They were there — we could hear them breathing — but they just weren’t responding.  What was going wrong?

We still gave it our best show.  A few technical glitches here and there, but nothing catastrophic.  No matter what, we simply couldn’t get them into it.  Or so it seemed.  We later learned it was "Angels" night — the night in which CTG’s major contributors often attend.  This was an over-70’s crowd.  We were told they really did enjoy the show.  But clearly, they weren’t the whoop-and-holler types.  Fair enough.

And — as if to cap off the dreadful evening with an act of symbolism — we even had an audience member pass out during the finale.  A young woman, I believe.  The paramedics were called in.

Yikes.

Last night was much more like it.  A very large house; a very LIVE house.  We have people coming back for a second and third time, bringing their friends.  They were very responsive.  Half the cast* had their noses buried in the new Harry Potter book — I suggested that we just go with it and have all the characters walk around with the book in one hand.

It was terrific to feel that energy again.  The show has evolved so much in both big and small ways since we opened.  I would really like to sit in the audience and watch it.

Today is the Sunday matinee.  When I left the cast party last night at around 1:30, the jello shots were still being knocked back.  I’m good to go; I hope the rest of the gang is.

Still time to get tickets.  Don’t miss out!  Info at the right….

*  I exaggerate

Read More

BREAKING NEWS: Hillary Clinton Has Boobs!

Ken AshfordElection 2008Leave a Comment

Apparently, the folks at the Washington Post are intrigued by the fact that — well, here’s the opening sentence of this hard-hitting news piece:

There was cleavage on display Wednesday afternoon on C-SPAN2. It belonged to Sen. Hillary Clinton.

You would think that the article would segue into something, oh, I dunno, relevant to oh, I dunno, something.  But no.  What followed was a 750 word essay about Clinton’s cleavage …even though, as we learn in the second paragraph:

There wasn’t an unseemly amount of cleavage showing, but there it was. Undeniable.

How old are these people?  Twelve?

Pray There Are No International Incidents Tomorrow

Ken AshfordBush & Co.Leave a Comment

USAToday tells us that Bush is undergoing a 2-1/2 hours colonoscopy tomorrow, and during that time, Lord Voldemort Dick Cheney will be "Acting President".

I can see it now —

Saturday headline: Bush briefly transfers Presidential power to Cheney.

Sunday headline: The U.S. starts bombing Tehran.

The End Of Checkers

Ken AshfordScience & TechnologyLeave a Comment

Like the much easier game tic-tac-toe, scientists have mathematically proved that every game of checkers will end in a draw if both players never make a mistake.  This means, essentially, that computers can be programmed to win (or at least, sustain a draw) in checkers.  And that’s where we are now, technological-speaking.

You can play checkers against this computer — and you will never ever win.