firing these people between administrations is within precedent. doing it in the middle of a term is very odd. hence the extra scrutiny.
3/8/2007 10:21:59 PM
3/8/2007 11:16:37 PM
The US Attorney in Seattle, John McKay, was fired after the Attorney decided there was no evidence to support a charge of voter fraud in the 2004 Governor race, where the Democrat won by a very slim margin. McKay was contacted by the Cheif of Staff of then-Chairman of the Ethics Committee, Doc Hastings (R-Wash).the republican congressman's chief of staff called McKay and pressured him to give information about the investigation. McKay reported that
3/9/2007 1:44:16 AM
Some people are really, truly confused about what powers the president does and does not have.
3/9/2007 2:58:58 AM
why dont you enlighten us, o wise one.[Edited on March 9, 2007 at 3:06 AM. Reason : ]
3/9/2007 3:04:50 AM
3/9/2007 3:38:40 AM
i snipped the first sentence out, i guess to focus my discussion. i probably should have left it in.
3/9/2007 4:10:12 AM
^your news story is inaccurate. they're not appointed for "indefinite terms" -- they're appointed for the remainder of the existing 4-year term, instead of the prior 120-day limit
3/9/2007 8:36:51 AM
3/9/2007 10:43:16 AM
^^ technically, they meant that it's "indefinite" within the context of the remainder of the four year term. the wording was part of the way it was snuck past congress. It gave the impression that unconfirmed interim appointments were necessary in the case that a new Attorney had to be installed in an emergency without having time to wait for Congress, somehow framed in the context of the "War on Terrar". Thereby implying that a confirmation process would follow the emergency appointment.no one has ever suggested that they would somehow be entitled to serve past the overall term of the administration who placed them. that was never the point. the real point is that the covert addition to the Patriot Act prompted by the White House and rubber stamped by the Republican led congress, made the night before it was voted on, and its sole effect was to remove the US Congress from the nomination process regarding interim replacements. prior to that change, Congress had to approve all interim replacements (occuring, on average, at the rate of one interim attorney every five years), just as they had to approve the appointments in the first place.no one expected the administration was going to use it to arbitrarily fire their own attorneys for political retribution, under cover of the War on Terrar. a conformation process by the US Congress would necessarily raise the question of why were these attorneys, previously given excellent performance reviews, ever fired in the first place.^ and whats your point? is this somehow news to you? it's only the way congress has operated for at least the past 100 years if not longer.[Edited on March 9, 2007 at 11:14 AM. Reason : ]
3/9/2007 10:46:09 AM
3/9/2007 11:49:45 AM
when these are used to avoid intended oversight, i think it goes against the spirit of the constitution and is wrong.
3/9/2007 11:53:07 AM
^^There are checks and balances in places other than between congress and the presidency. like in the independent judiciary.
3/9/2007 3:40:53 PM
3/9/2007 3:42:34 PM
(congress people don't sign legislation)
3/9/2007 3:43:25 PM
since technically its not legislation until both houses pass it?
3/9/2007 3:45:00 PM
^^^ ok, whatever guy. i dont want to hear anything about sneaky tactics from you for the next two years when Pelosi puts some through some crunk shit under the rader.[Edited on March 9, 2007 at 3:45 PM. Reason : ]
3/9/2007 3:45:32 PM
^^no they just vote on the stuff.
3/9/2007 3:46:23 PM
^^you wont because i dont go around whining about how much i dislike the countryso you wont have to worry about thatps: the "dumbfuck congress" i referred to is bipartisan...but you probably think i'm a republican or something^well at least you arent denying that they're dumbfucks for not knowing what they're signing voting on[Edited on March 9, 2007 at 3:48 PM. Reason : .]
3/9/2007 3:47:18 PM
on that we agree. i think it's a shame that legislators either didn't read the bill or are just using that as an excuse for not having the balls to question the patriot act.
3/9/2007 3:49:34 PM
Read The Bills Acthttp://www.grupthink.com/topic/5264
3/9/2007 3:56:37 PM
http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/03/13/congress.prosecutors.ap/index.html?eref=rss_politicsWhy the hell is cnn using this language
3/13/2007 9:33:35 AM
Attorney General Janet Reno today demanded the prompt resignation of all United States Attorneys, leading the Federal prosecutor in the District of Columbia to suggest that the order could be tied to his long-running investigation of Representative Dan Rostenkowski, a crucial ally of President Clinton.nytimes 1993
3/13/2007 9:38:48 AM
proof the media has a conservative bias!
3/13/2007 11:40:13 AM
3/13/2007 1:59:37 PM
some of fired us attorneys to be on npr shortly.
3/13/2007 2:07:11 PM
Alberto Gonzales may be the most slimy and corrupt official (at least in regards to what his job is supposed to entail) of anyone in the white house.....
3/13/2007 2:09:15 PM
Could some of you up in arms over this please tell me why you find this is a big deal? Im being serious, not trying to be a dick.
3/13/2007 2:15:22 PM
Isn't that fairly self evident from what has been posted in the thread?
3/13/2007 2:23:24 PM
but what makes it different from what any other prez had done before? Thats what im asking.
3/13/2007 2:36:21 PM
Go back and read the thread, because if you are making that statement, it's obvious you didn't.
3/13/2007 2:41:47 PM
us attorney on the radio said that no one said anything about the firings until gonzalez & co. gave reasons to congress for the firings which were bogus.they (us attorneys) had been told that they were being removed to make room for other republican nominees for the job.it is a big deal because the us attorneys are some of the most powerful law enforcement officials in the country. they are appointed politically, but there is an inherent need to be as fair and unbiased as possible.he said that it is typical for presidents to hire a new set of us attorneys when they come in (he said that clinton, bush and reagan had done this -- wasn't sure of before). he said that it was an unwritten rule for the nominees to stay put (barring bad performance) during a given president's tenure and that the reasons for that unwritten rule are being played out right now.[Edited on March 13, 2007 at 2:57 PM. Reason : .]
3/13/2007 2:56:10 PM
409, I dont see anything different other than people calling it sneaky and criminal.. when in fact it seems to be neither.Look I think bush is a givemecrat, but I dont see why you all feel this is a big deal.
3/13/2007 3:06:10 PM
3/14/2007 3:28:44 PM
3/14/2007 4:23:58 PM
Sounds like nothing more than good ole take the fall politics.
3/14/2007 4:41:12 PM
scuba, thanks for the info. It helps to see another point of view.I actually agree with the patriot act in this case. I think the measure you are up in arms about about appointing them without going through congress was in case we were attack and couldnt get an active congress in session. This has been explained in the media before, even the attorney general testified that under normal circumstances the appointees will go through congress. Where he fucked up, is when they started emailing eachother about the possibilty of making them NOT go through congress when there is absolutely no reason for them not too. For that he needs to be repremanded.I have no problem with bush cleaning house, it happens often. Clinton fired them all, why cant W? He is legal to fire anyone he wants to without any reason. No one raised a fuss in the past. Now they are only letting go 8 from what ive just read. But the gonzalez mess, and changing his tune is a major issue, in my opinion.
3/14/2007 6:36:43 PM
the good ole' newt gingrich approach
3/14/2007 8:10:04 PM
3/14/2007 8:58:54 PM
^ thats not the point. Bush fired all the attorneys from the Clinton Administration. But when he did, the new ones were confirmed. Quit being a partisan hack and read other peoples posts before you respond. This has been addressed multiple times!
3/14/2007 9:05:08 PM
As has been mentioned, it is customary to replace all US attorneys at the start of a new presidency. Clinton did it. So did Reagan.
3/14/2007 9:12:07 PM
I think it would be better if the US Attorney General always came out of a dissenting party from the one in power. Someone who would watch over things and wasn't beholding to the president.
3/14/2007 9:18:13 PM
.
7/22/2010 8:17:00 AM
No criminal charges in Bush-era U.S. attorney firingsJuly 21, 2010
7/22/2010 8:32:48 AM
but... but.... but...its Bush! It had to be evil!
7/22/2010 11:51:22 AM
Career bureaucrats fired for expressing political opinions incompatible with their superiors!A horrific crime has been committed, the likes of which have never been seen on the face of the earth!
7/22/2010 11:54:53 AM
Yeah, those posts pretty much represent the "outrage" expressed in the OP.
7/22/2010 3:07:21 PM
*Crickets*http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K8E_zMLCRNg
7/27/2010 3:06:54 PM