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Democrats Should Declare Censure Move 'Irresponsible'
RealClearPolitics ^ | 3/21/06 | Mort Kondracke

Posted on 03/21/2006 9:23:20 AM PST by Jean S

The best thing that can be said about the call by Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.) to censure President Bush is that practically none of his colleagues is backing him up.

Democrats are not, as he charges, "cowering" in the face of possible Republican allegations that they are pro-terrorist. Rather, they don't want to distract attention from the main Democratic assaults on Bush and the GOP - that he's "incompetent" and that Republicans are in "disarray."

Moreover, as The New York Times reported Thursday, Feingold's move is being used by Republicans, right-wing talk show hosts and conservatives in general to motivate the base.

It's suddenly occurring to Republicans that if Democrats capture control of either chamber of Congress, they'll use their subpoena power to make life pure hell for Bush and the GOP over the next two years. And, if it's the House that Democrats carry, it's not out of the question that impeachment proceedings could be launched against him in a Judiciary Committee chaired by firebrand lefty Rep. John Conyers (Mich.).

However demoralized Republicans are about Bush and the state of the country, the prospect of seeing him pilloried should help bring out GOP voters. Moreover, the idea that Democrats might impeach Bush could turn off ordinary voters, much as the impeachment of President Bill Clinton did in 1998. That cost Republicans four House seats, a loss that led to the ousting of then-Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.).

Feingold himself has said he thinks Bush has committed an impeachable offense by ordering "secret" and "illegal" National Security Agency wiretaps of "domestic" terrorist targets. He claims he's being "moderate" by moving to only censure Bush.

In fact, the whole enterprise is irresponsible - and I'd like to believe that's another reason why Democrats are ducking endorsement of Feingold's action, even though no party leader has actually used that word in public.

While Democratic leaders don't want to endorse Feingold's move, they also are evidently cowering at the prospect of being further savaged by left-wing Web loggers who already are denouncing them for being "soft" on Bush.

Feingold himself admits that he favors wiretapping terrorists and would not stop the program Bush has undertaken, which he says "can easily be done" under existing law.

If that's the case, then the responsible thing for a Senator to do - especially someone who wants to be president - would be to find a way to adjust the law to enable the government to find out what terrorists are up to, rather than punishing a president who believed he had to skirt the law to do it.

In any event, Bush did report what he was doing to Congressional leaders, including Democrats, so it was not entirely "secret." It's not clear - because details of the program are secret - why Bush believed he could not comply with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act and obtain warrants for the taps. If FISA procedures are too onerous, the responsible thing would be to make them less so.

Moreover, there's no evidence whatsoever that any innocent Americans have been harmed as a result of the NSA wiretaps or that Bush has ordered them for some nefarious or political purpose.

Feingold wants to censure Bush - and personally believes it's impeachable - for, at worst, an excess of diligence in protecting the country from terrorists who have vowed to kill millions of us if they can. This is scarcely a "high crime" or even a "crime."

Feingold has the reputation of being a sincere and principled civil libertarian, liberal and foreign policy dove. So, it seems he's being honest in his irresponsibility.

On the other hand, what he's doing is also politically advantageous, short-term, for his presidential prospects, even as it's politically disastrous for the Democratic Party as a whole. I'd say it's also politically polarizing and dangerous for the country.

Feingold hopes to distinguish himself among all the other male candidates chasing front-running Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) - and steal some of the ardent lefties who might otherwise support her and who now see him as more courageous than she.

Feingold wants to become the leading 2008 candidate of the anti-war left of the Democratic Party - the wing that nominated another sincere, principled anti-war liberal, Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.), in 1972. He lost 49 states to President Richard Nixon that fall.

Feingold's move reinforces the party's image as "McGovernite" - weak on national security - at a time when Bush's inept Hurricane Katrina response and the Dubai ports disaster has given Democrats an opening to knock Bush on homeland security. Democrats seem to understand the danger of repeating the McGovern mistake. That's why they rejected now-Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean as their 2004 nominee and picked Vietnam War veteran Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) as an "electable" alternative. Right now, most Democrats are similarly shying away from Feingold's censure initiative, deeming it too far out.

On the other hand, Bush-hatred and partisanship is so intense among Democrats that their leaders often go far out themselves, as when House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) embraced the proposal for a rapid withdrawal from Iraq by Rep. John Murtha (Pa.), and when Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (Nev.) labeled various GOP Senators as corrupt and had to apologize.

Such conduct is a gift to Republicans. As Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) told me, "every time us Republicans get into trouble, along come the Democrats to help us out."

Still, if Feingold's move is another gift to the GOP, it's not a gift to the country. The more left-wing activists pressure Democrats and right-wing activists pressure Republicans, the less chance there is that the two parties can come together to win the country's wars and solve its problems. The latest bipartisan George Washington University Battleground survey shows that the public hates this back-and-forth. Asked whether they preferred that Members of Congress possess "strength of values and convictions" or "willingness to find practical, workable solutions," respondents favored "workable solutions" by 58 percent to 38 percent.

This suggests that the country hungers for a real "uniter" not "divider" as president in 2008. And that would not be Russ Feingold.

Mort Kondracke is the Executive Editor of Roll Call.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 109th; backfire; bush; censure; feingold; irresponsible; kondracke; unfit

1 posted on 03/21/2006 9:23:25 AM PST by Jean S
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To: JeanS

I hope they embrace it...hug it.


2 posted on 03/21/2006 9:29:16 AM PST by Dog (We have had a date with destiny and Iran for 27 years---appealof2)
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To: JeanS

This Censure thing should be the least of their concerns, they have dug such a hole on Iraq because they bet their future on the failure in Iraq in hopes to prove the President wrong.


3 posted on 03/21/2006 9:29:23 AM PST by Wasanother (Terrorist come in many forms but all are RATS.)
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To: JeanS

I find the irony delicious that Russ Feingold, one-half of the McCain-Feingold Campaign Finance Reform Bill that decimates OUR basic Constitutional right to Freedom of Speech, has the audacity and downright chutzpah to accuse the President of breaking the law!! Someone better remind him about throwing stones and glass houses!!!

What a maroon!


4 posted on 03/21/2006 9:40:27 AM PST by DustyMoment (FloriDUH - proud inventors of pregnant/hanging chads and judicide!!)
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To: JeanS

The author seems to believe the President doesn't have the power to do the NSA thing. I guess the author is just misinformed...


5 posted on 03/21/2006 9:42:21 AM PST by Edgerunner (Proud to be an infidel)
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To: JeanS

We have to take action!!!! Let's hit up every poll, and say YES to censure. When the demo's think they have massive support, let 'em try it!!! It would be their total undoing!!!!!


6 posted on 03/21/2006 9:52:16 AM PST by joe fonebone (Vote YES! on Lake Iran......)
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To: JeanS

This stunt MIGHT win Feingold the primary

But it will sink the Dem party as a whole .. especially in the general elections

Bring it on!


7 posted on 03/21/2006 10:33:46 AM PST by Mo1 ("Stupidity is also a gift from God, but it should not be abused." Pope John Paul II)
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To: JeanS
Thank you for NOT excerpting this article.
8 posted on 03/21/2006 10:48:34 AM PST by upchuck (Wikipedia.com - the most unbelievable web site in the world.)
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To: JeanS

Feingold is not a principled civil libertarian or anything near to it. Remember, he was the co-sponsor of a bill that strangled political expression. He is another in an endless series of self-absorbed, ambitious mediocrities who preen to their wacko base. He could care less about endangering this country. To him, the only thing that matters is what's good for Russ.


9 posted on 03/21/2006 10:58:04 AM PST by Inwoodian
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To: JeanS

Sign the Petition to Censure Jimmy Carter

In response to the Feingold censure effort, Melanie Morgan of KSFO560 and MoveAmericaForward.com is spearheading a petition drive to Censure Jimmy Carter for his continuous pro-terrorist and anti-American words and acts.

Goto
http://www.CensureCarter.com
and pls add your name to the petition.

And someone could start a new thread on this petition, plus send the info to all your fav bloggers, etc.


10 posted on 03/21/2006 11:45:13 AM PST by auzerais
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To: Edgerunner
Mort Kondracke mis-informed....?

sarcasm (off)

It wouldn't be the first time.

11 posted on 03/21/2006 7:01:41 PM PST by HP8753 (My cat loves watching "The Grinch who stole Christmas".)
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