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Daily Impeachment News:

July 27, 2007

Virginia Rep. Bobby Scott Debates Impeachment

Filed under: D.C.,Impeachment Progress News,Virginia — Jodin Morey @ 10:10 pm

After Downing Street — By David Swanson

Some colleagues and I spent much of Thursday and Friday meeting with Congress Members and their staffers to discuss impeachment. Some of them were on the edge of backing it, others miles away but inching closer. Congressman Bobby Scott, a Democrat from Virginia who serves on the Judiciary Committee, was one of the furthest from backing impeachment but one of the most interesting to debate the topic with.

I’ve debated Scott before, at a public debate in 2004. He was representing Howard Dean, and I was filling in for Dennis Kucinich. Scott did better than Dean himself could have done. I actually felt bad making him defend positions that were not his own. But Friday’s debate was all Scott, on his own, explaining in his own words to a small group why the Democrats should not impeach Dick Cheney.

I like debating Scott because he starts with most of the same premises I do but ends up in a totally different place. We ran into people on our lobbying visits who believed President Bush might soon decide to declare victory and pull out of Iraq. How do you debate someone like that who seems to be just briefly visiting this planet? We also ran into a number of people who believed that by not impeaching Cheney, the Democrats could make Hillary Clinton president in 2009, and that doing so was the most important project right now. With these people, in a public debate, you could argue that restoring the rule of law to our government is more important than an election. But, since they fundamentally disagree with that, in a private meeting you have to argue the case on their terms. Fortunately, it’s easily done.

When the Democrats held back from impeachment during Iran Contra, they lost the next elections. When the Democrats led the effort to investigate and impeach Nixon, they won big in the next election, even though Ford was running as an incumbent. When the Republicans tried to impeach Truman, they got what they wanted out of the Supreme Court and then won the next elections. Articles of Impeachment have been filed against 10 presidents, usually by Republicans, and usually with electoral success following. When the Republicans impeached Clinton, impeachment was actually unpopular with the public. Even so, the Republicans lost far fewer seats than is the norm for a majority party at that point in its tenure. Two years later, they lost seats in the Senate, which had acquitted, but maintained their strength in the House, with representatives who had led the impeachment charge winning big.

Parties that seek to impeach are not punished at the next election. In fact, they frequently improve their position — as evidenced by Dems in 1974, Republicans in 1952, and all the way back to the Whigs of last century. In every election back to 1842 where House members of an opposition party to a sitting president have — as a whole or a significant caucus within the party — proposed impeachment of the president, that opposition party retained or improved its position in the House at the following election. There is no instance of voters responding to a significant impeachment effort by sweeping its advocates out of office. In fact, history points in a different direction — suggesting that voters frequently reward parties for taking the Constitution and the rule of law seriously. To establish this point in the minds of Congress Members and staffers, we gave them all copies of John Nichols’ book “The Genius of Impeachment.”

Scott makes a different argument. He maintains that there does not yet exist solid evidence for impeachment, and that investigations will uncover such evidence faster if they are not called impeachment investigations. He thinks that calling them impeachment investigations will prevent the Democrats from joining with the Republicans to pass good legislation. And he’s concerned that joining the 15 heroes now cosponsoring articles of impeachment against Dick Cheney would “marginalize” him.

Scott spent a lot of time talking about particular complicated investigations, such as those involving FBI security letters and Justice Department attorney firings. I agreed with him several times that these were areas that could use more investigation, and tried several times to direct the conversation to other areas where no further investigation is needed. But Scott wouldn’t change the subject.

I pointed out that an article of impeachment had been passed against President Richard Nixon for his refusal to comply with subpoenas, and that Bush and Cheney have refused to comply with subpoenas. Scott had two quick responses before going back to talking about his preferred investigations. First, he maintains that Congress may be able to force compliance with subpoenas if given enough time. This seems very unlikely. It seems unlikely that a court will side with Congress and even less likely that Bush or Cheney will comply simply because a court orders it. Second, Scott maintains that the only evidence of an impeachable offense that really counts is testimony given under oath or information discovered by an investigation. Anything already known to the public is by definition not evidence. I proposed having Senator Leahy testify under oath that Cheney had not complied with a subpoena. Scott changed the subject.

I tried another tack. I pointed out that the signing statements devised by Cheney and used by Bush to overthrow laws are posted publicly on the White House website, eliminating the need for a long investigation to find them. I said that a Government Accounting Office study had found that with a sample of the signing statements, in 30% of the cases Bush and Cheney have gone ahead and violated the laws they announced the right to violate. Scott said the statements didn’t matter, only the crimes. I said that the most obvious was torture. He asked if we knew for sure they were torturing. I told him it had been extensively documented for years and recently by groups like the Center for Constitutional Rights including the testimony of victims. Scott said they’d need to look into it.

Ya think? Might be appropriate, I’ve got to agree.

But I disagree that we need more information than is publicly known to impeach. An impeachment is, after all, only an indictment. The trial takes place in the Senate. And I don’t know of any legal basis for the notion that information is disqualified as evidence when it becomes publicly known.

I asked Congressman Scott to imagine what it would be like if he were investigating the illegal spying programs and trying to pin down documents and testimony to prove they existed and violated the law. In such a circumstance, Scott might explain his slow deliberateness thus: “We live in the real world. If we could get the President to go on videotape and confess to having knowingly violated the law, we wouldn’t have to do all of this.” But, of course, in reality Bush has already done that. He’s confessed on television. No, he was not under oath. But putting him under oath to have him claim he never said what we have him saying on videotape would seem counterproductive, at least to my amateur mind. Scott was not impressed with this evidence, apparently because Bush’s confession had not come about through an investigation. This seems to be a case in which the sheer audacity of Bush and Cheney’s crimes serves to hide them from Congress. Nixon said “If the President does it, then it’s not illegal.” This Congress says “If the President does not hide it, then it’s not illegal.”

I also asked about one of the charges contained in H Res 333, specifically the charge that Cheney has threatened an aggressive war on Iran. Cheney has done so on videotape. How, I asked, would you go about “investigating” those videotapes? Well, Scott replied, you’d need to bring in people to testify that it was illegal. I pointed Scott to the UN Charter and Article 6 of the US Constitution, but he insisted that testimony would be needed.

If you’d like to volunteer to testify, here’s what you can do. Read this bit of the UN Charter making it illegal to threaten an aggressive war:
http://kucinich.house.gov/UploadedFiles/artIII4B.pdf

and call Congressman Scott at (757) 380-1000 and volunteer to testify under oath that you read it. For that matter, you can read all the evidence compiled to support H Res 333 at
http://kucinich.house.gov/SpotlightIssues/documents.htm

and let Scott know you’re available as a witness. Under Article 6 of our Constitution, a treaty the United States is party to is the law of the land.

Here’s another case I wish I’d been able to bring up in the meeting with Scott. When Bush was warned about Hurricane Katrina, it was recorded on videotape. When he told the public he had not been warned, the cameras were rolling. How would one “investigate” that? Can corpses “testify”?

But what about Scott’s claim that the toxic word “Impeachment,” forever poisoned by the Republican attack on Bill Clinton, would slow investigations down? Well, subpoenas are not working. Contempt and criminal charges are very unlikely to work. And the special prosecutor route has been tried. What happened? Cheney organized a coordinated campaign to obstruct the investigation. Scooter Libby was convicted of obstructing justice, and Bush commuted his sentence and is almost certain to pardon him in 2009. Where are the investigations speeding off to? I don’t see it. The public doesn’t see it. This could be part of the reason Congress is even less popular than Bush. Exposing crimes and not holding the top criminals accountable, just persuades us that Congress is weak. In fact, Scott himself argued that it’s hard to find witnesses willing to testify to Bush and Cheney’s crimes, because they have shown how fiercely they exact retribution against whistleblowers. I would have thought this sort of situation was exactly the reason Congress had been created as a separate branch of government with the power to impeach.

As far as passing useful legislation in cooperation with Republicans, one has to ask: what useful legislation? And won’t it be vetoed? The Democrats ought to be bringing Republicans on board with impeachment, not behaving as if they – the Democrats – were still in the minority.

In the only poll ever done on impeaching Cheney, 76% of Democrats said they favor it (and 54% of all Americans, with 40% opposed). But Scott is worried that joining 15 Congress Members in support of impeaching Cheney would “marginalize” him.

Scott’s office, like every office in Congress, has been flooded with Emails, phone calls, and letters backing impeachment. While we were meeting in his DC office, some of his constituents in Virginia were standing outside one of his district offices holding Honk-to-Impeach signs; and the cars were honking!

But Scott openly told us that the only thing politicians care about is elections. Scott typically runs unopposed in his primary and in the general election. Maybe it’s time someone who has given the Constitution a good read stepped up and challenged him. Otherwise, for the sake of this country and those it impacts, someone is going to have to explain to Scott and others like him that another year and a half of “investigations” is going to lead only to Republican victories next November.

(Original Article)


5 Comments

  1. Virginia Rep. Bobby Scott Debates Impeachment…

    Some colleagues and I spent much of Thursday and Friday meeting with Congress Members and their staffers to discuss impeachment. Some of them were on the edge of backing it, others miles away but inching closer. Congressman Bobby Scott, a Democrat from…

    Trackback by www.buzzflash.net — July 27, 2007 @ 10:19 pm

  2. What do you expect from people who are getting their kick-backs from the same people paying off Bush, Cheney and the media? Our government is supposed to be transparent, so how can evidence not be evidence if it is in the public? How can Dick Cheney and George W. Bush go on TV and lye to us and that not be evidence of lying? Maybe every time Dick Cheney and George W. Bush go on TV they should be required to be put under oath !! We have a congress of cowards !! If my congressman (Joe Boca) doesn’t answer my email or at least comes out in favor of impeachment, I’ll run against him. Any supporters?

    Comment by epro — July 30, 2007 @ 1:19 am

  3. I strongly encourage that you do exactly that. Cindy Sheehan has set an excellent example in running against Nancy Pelosi.

    The core of your platform should be that Joe Boca is in violation of his oath of office for not standing up to Bush & Cheney as he swore to do when he gave his oath “to support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies foreign and domestic”.

    The more publicity this can bring the better. As Sheehan has said, as soon as Pelosi comes out in favor of impeachment she will end her campaign.

    Comment by Mikael — July 30, 2007 @ 10:31 am

  4. From the moment this administration took office there have been questions about their integrity and goals. Impeachment should have started before they even took office-I still hold they stole the 2000 election.By the sheer number of investigations conducted regarding their actions should warrant impeachment- for ineptitude or out right crimes. And how can we be decieved if they don’t lie to us in public? The hold fast group have decided the citizens can be easily dazzelded and/or baffled by their B.S. He is just another step man for the “Horsemen”.

    360.yahoo.com/kimmy’s quest

    Comment by Kim Bogue — August 2, 2007 @ 7:34 am

  5. To the Honorable Congressman Bobby Scott:
    Mr. Scott you have come to my aid before but this is a national matter I’m asking to look in on. I heard on a local radio station 105.3 Kiss FM on the Michael Baisden show that there are 6 Afro American boys being prosecuted for 22 years for fighting on school grounds in Alexandria, La. This is ridiculous especially when nobody was killed or diable that I heard about. The fight was over the boys wanting to sit under a tree that white kids hang under. I’m not asking you to stick your neck way out since this is not in your district or state. But the DJ Michael Baisden and the Rev. Al Sharpton will be protesting down there on September 20, 2007. I’m was born in Washington, D.C. and didn’t not see what Jim Crow laws were like but this seems like one. I’m only asking you I know have the position to at least talk to the governor or Michael Baisden on those boys. I live in NewportNews, Virginia and only search for justice. I’m just want the boys to get fair treatment. As I would if they were my children. Please do what you can.

    Comment by Tracey Wilson — August 23, 2007 @ 1:00 am

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"I just want you to know that,
when we talk about war, we're really talking about peace."
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Arguments Against Bush Impeachment...

• If we impeach Bush, we’ll get President Cheney!
The first impeachment resolution introduced by McKinney included Bush, Cheney, and Rice. Although, even if we only initially pursue Bush, initiating the impeachment process will lead to an investigation that will implicate lots of people in the Bush administration who are guilty of committing crimes, including Cheney.

No matter who we get to replace Bush, we’ll be showing those in power that anyone who breaks the law will be held accountable.

• Promoting impeachment will seem too “extreme.”
Demanding that crimes be investigated is NOT extreme. Some previous impeachment attempts were considered extreme because they were pursued for actions that didn't rise to the level of a Constitutional crisis, which is what the impeachment tool is meant to be used for. Nixon's impeachment, however, was bipartisan.

  • We should wait to impeach...
Wait to impeach? We've waited 3 or more years too long already. We had enough evidence to impeach years ago. Remember, an impeachment only means you have enough evidence to warrant a trial, just like an indictment. Our congress people didn't take an oath to bipartisanship. They took an oath to the Constitution. Besides which, our troops, Iraqi civilians, and our own civil liberties are all waiting for this.
 
• Before we impeach, we should get some legislation passed...
And with unconstitutional Presidential Signing Statements, veto power, and the power of "Commander in Chief" at his disposal, how do you think Congress is going to get anything accomplished without first impeaching Bush?

If your tire blows while you're driving, do you stop to fix it? Or do you continue driving on your rim because to stop would take too much time?

• It hurts the democracy to go through a presidential impeachment. And Bush is a lame duck anyway.
Holding government officials accountable for their actions strengthens our democracy. Letting lawlessness stand weakens it.

Sometimes reprimanding a child (president) doesn't make the family (Washington) a happy place. But you still have to do it so the child and his siblings (future presidents) learn about accountability. Impeachment is horribly UNDERUSED, which is part of why there's so much corruption at the top. Politicians must learn to fear it. People think things are better because we improved the make-up of our law-making body, Congress. But Bush is BREAKING LAWS. So, it doesn't matter how many laws Congress passes if they don't serve their OVERSIGHT duties as well by impeaching. They swore to defend the Constitution. What are laws without enforcement?

Besides, considering Bush's track-record of breaking laws, he can still do a lot of damage. Our troops, Iran, and our Supreme Court are all endangered so long as he remains in office. Waiting until Bush is out of office will leave us complicit in any further crimes he commits. The Union of Concerned Scientists has estimated that the death toll from a "tactical" nuclear weapon of the kind Bush is contemplating using in Iran would be at minimum 3 million men, women, and children. The path of death would stretch across country boundaries into India.

Perhaps worst of all, we set a terrible precedent by allowing Bush to stay in office after he's broken so many laws. Impeachment will stop future presidents from using Bush's actions as justification for even more lawbreaking and erosion of civil liberties.

• I'm a Democrat/
Republican. If we support impeachment it will lower the chances of my party winning in 2008.

So, your party would rather win elections than do what's right for the country? I hope you're wrong. I also hope the public is willing to throw additional support to any party that holds our elected officials accountable for their actions. This has been historically true with every single impeachment effort launched. And this impeachment effort would begin with majority support (unlike most past impeachments including Nixon).

• Impeachment will never happen. Congress members will block it.
Well, all we need is a majority of support in the House. And 2/3rds vote in the Senate to remove Bush from office will happen once the evidence gets aired on the floor of the House, and subsequently the national media outlets. The political pressure will become too great.

Today's impossibility is tomorrow's reality. Congress members will realize that tying their political future to Bush reduces their chances of getting elected. Remember, one way or another, Bush is gone by 2009— but members of Congress may retain their offices beyond that date. Bush's poll numbers are extremely low, and most Americans support impeachment. This is a bipartisan movement. This means that if we make the pressure unbearable for Members of Congress, they'll turn on him to keep their own seats (like they did with Nixon). It's already starting to happen. While many Members of Congress have behaved unethically in the last few years, it's important to understand that this is related to their warped view of what's in their self-interest. Let's wake them up to their true self-interest (impeaching the president), by showing them our support for impeachment.

And even if we only impeach, and the Senate fails to do their duty and remove him from office, it will only implicate the Senators who fail to do their sworn Constitutional duty.

• But Speaker of the House Pelosi said that Impeachment was "off the table."

Pelosi most likely said this to remove any appearance of conflict-of-interest that would arise if she were thrust into the presidency as a result of the coming impeachment. What we need to do is to pressure Pelosi not to interfere with impeachment maneuverings within her party. Sending her Do-It-Yourself impeachments legitimizes her when she joins the impeachment movement in the future.

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