Monday, March 19, 2007

pass the popcorn

Gonzales' plight puts Bush at risk

WASHINGTON — As more Republicans called last week on Alberto R. Gonzales to resign, President Bush's aides began to look beyond the attorney general and focus on preventing the controversy over the firing of federal prosecutors from spreading — and endangering Karl Rove, the president's top political advisor.

"This is not going to go away," warned Joseph E. DiGenova, a former U.S. attorney in the Reagan administration. "I'm sure the president is going to let it go as long as he can … but there's only so much bleeding he can take."

The fracas over the fired prosecutors reflects a larger underlying problem for Bush: His political standing as president, already battered by the war in Iraq and domestic missteps like the handling of Hurricane Katrina, has only continued to erode since his party lost control of Congress in November.

Initially, the dispute centered on the Justice Department, Gonzales and his top aides. But documents released last week suggested that Rove and former White House Counsel Harriet E. Miers were also involved in the decision to fire eight U.S. attorneys after the 2004 election. That brought the issue to the threshold of the Oval Office and prompted reporters to ask whether Bush had been involved.

...Gonzales and his aides initially told Congress that the prosecutors were fired because their performance was unsatisfactory. But documents released last week showed that officials also discussed whether the U.S. attorneys had been "loyal Bushies," in the words of one Justice Department e-mail.

...The shift to Democratic control has accelerated the controversy.

"Elections matter," Ornstein said. "If the Republicans were still in charge of Congress, even by one vote, the reaction to this would have been that it was just a personnel matter. The administration might still have had a problem, but it would have taken a lot longer to develop."

Several leading Republicans said they expected Gonzales to resign in the next few weeks.

2 comments:

Cassandra Says said...

I'm really not sure what to say other than that these people scare the crap out of me. I would love to be able to simply sneer, but I've met people like this and...they're terrifying.
Try working with them, too. It's particularly disturbing when they're young and outwardly look like any normal 20-something. And then you start talking to them. And then you start looking for the exit signs.

Anonymous said...

No time to elaborate, but I thought I might mention that as a result of your post, now every time there is some hellacious news item (e.g. yesterday's bit about the woman from the Justice Dept who's actually going to plead the 5th), my exhortation of choice is, "pass the popcorn!"

:)