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How Bush will be impeached
The Spectator (U.K.) ^ | 04/29/06 | Christopher Caldwell

Posted on 04/27/2006 7:47:11 AM PDT by Pokey78

Washington

In early April a silver-haired lady held up a placard at an Iraq war protest that has since been replicated on bumper stickers across America and blogs all over cyberspace. ‘Will Someone Please Give George W. Bush a B*** Job,’ the sign read, ‘So We Can Impeach Him?’ For partisan Democrats — at least those still smarting over the 1998 impeachment of Bill Clinton for lying about his office sex life — the sign’s appeal lay in its combination of low humour and righteous embitterment. But the embitterment predominates over the humour. Should Democrats win back the House of Representatives next fall, as appears more and more likely, the humour will fall away, and Bush will be impeached — whether he gets what Clinton got or not.

Until recently, the move to impeach Bush was confined to the Democratic party’s cranky fringe. The city council of Santa Cruz, California, the country’s marijuana Mecca, has urged the President’s impeachment since his first term. The San Francisco Board of Supervisors has recommended an impeachment inquiry, as have Democratic parties in Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina and Wisconsin. So have the retired Manhattanites who style themselves the Vermont State Legislature, and the village of Nederland, Colorado, a member in good standing of the Colorado Association of Ski Towns. Neil Young has released a song called ‘Impeach the President’. Being able to express one’s views on such matters is ‘what this country’s all about’, says Mr Young, a Canadian. Ramsey Clark, a veteran of both Lyndon Johnson’s cabinet and Saddam Hussein’s legal defence team, has his own impeachment website.

Ordinarily, you need a crime to remove a president from office. But the question of what one should impeach Bush for has not preoccupied his opponents unduly. Most often the charges levelled involve Iraq and the war on terror. Bush lied to get the country into war, say his detractors. He countenances torture. His plan for warrantless wiretaps of al-Qa’eda has compromised the privacy of countless ordinary Americans who receive calls in Arabic via portable satellite phone from tribal areas of the Hindu Kush.

But since last winter the movement to be rid of Bush by extra-democratic means has won converts among intellectuals — including former Harper’s magazine editor Lewis Lapham and the Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe — and in the Democratic party’s mainstream. Al Gore now seldom gives a speech in which he does not allude to the wiretaps. At a Christmas party in Finn McCool’s, a bar near the US Senate, John Kerry told several veterans of his 2004 campaign, ‘If we win back the House, I think we have a pretty solid case to bring articles of impeachment against this President.’

The growing likelihood of a Democratic win in the House is bringing the party leaders on board. Democrats need 15 seats to seize control and it is quite easy to see how they could get them. Voters tell pollsters by an unprecedented 13-point margin that they’d rather see Democrats running things. Republican districts in a dozen states are looking wobbly, and Democrat strategists are planning tough tactics — including demonstrations at military bases — to capture them. Some politicians have started counting their chickens. The Michigan leftist John Conyers, who would chair the House Judiciary Committee under a Democratic majority, introduced an impeachment resolution last winter. Shortly thereafter, the Wisconsin senator Russell Feingold urged that Bush be censured in the upper chamber for ‘one of the greatest attempts to dismantle our system of government that we have seen in the history of our country’.

Fellow Democrats have politely urged both Feingold and Conyers to shut up. Understandably. The American public can’t stand impeachment. When Republicans tried to destroy the career of Bill Clinton in the late 1990s, they turned the country against themselves, toppling their own leadership, including the House Speaker, Newt Gingrich.

So Feingold’s and Conyers’s irascibility or principle or whatchacallit presents their party with a problem. Now, as then, activist hardliners determine policy in both parties. Once riled, they will settle for nothing less than total war. This leaves party leaders in a delicate position. Whenever Nancy Pelosi, the Democrats’ leader in the House, speaks publicly, she gets browbeaten about how the President can be allowed to serve when his sole source of legitimacy is a mandate from the voters. Three months ago Pelosi told a meeting of her San Francisco constituents, ‘I think that we should solve this issue electorally.’ They booed her. Since then she has refined her stock answer into a nudge-nudge, wink-wink double entendre. ‘I think that things are going well for Democrats right now,’ she said recently. ‘In terms of impeachment, why doesn’t everybody channel their energy into winning the election and understand that elections have ramifications?’

The line between criminality and unpopularity is blurring in American politics. The blame for that is widely shared. On the one hand, the placard-waving lady with the silver hair is not exactly wrong about the Clinton business. Republicans are reaping the whirlwind for having abused the impeachment process and for trying to bamboozle the American people with a blizzard of non-sequiturs. (‘If Bill Clinton would lie to his wife about fondling an intern, how can you expect him to honour his word to veto the rider to the supplemental appropriations bill?’)

But the rot goes back further than that. Those ignorant and disgraceful right-wing troglodytes — the ones who warned, in 1974, that the ouster of Richard Nixon would send the country down a dangerous constitutional path — turn out to have been quite right. Democrats discovered that their legislative power could be wielded as a remedy to executive misconduct. They did not learn the difference between misconduct and disagreement. They sought to impeach Ronald Reagan twice — once (ridiculously) for his decision to invade Grenada, once (dangerously) for the so-called Iran Contra scandal. Over the past 30 years, impeachment has become an unwritten amendment to the American constitution. The last twice-elected president on whom an impeachment attempt was not made was Dwight Eisenhower.

Bush is in no more ultimate danger of being out of work than Clinton was. Impeachment is a charge brought by the House; removing a president requires two thirds of the Senate to convict him of those charges. But another impeachment would wreak further damage on American political stability. At the heart of the American constitutional balance is the idea that its president is obliged to the people, not to the legislature. When you have a people rendered inattentive by TV, shopping and other distractions of prosperity, it should not be surprising that legislators seize some of the people’s prerogatives. They strain towards the rights of parliaments to topple leaders.

And a Democratic majority, should one result from next November’s elections, will indeed impeach Bush. It won’t be because his deeds, or misdeeds, merit it. ‘Criminal stupidity’, after all, is a figure of speech, not a high crime.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: sillydems
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1 posted on 04/27/2006 7:47:17 AM PDT by Pokey78
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To: Pokey78

FYI: Christopher Caldwell a is a senior editor at The Weekly Standard &, I believe, Bob Novak's son-in-law.


2 posted on 04/27/2006 7:49:17 AM PDT by Pokey78 (‘FREE [INSERT YOUR FETID TOTALITARIAN BASKET-CASE HERE]’)
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To: Pokey78

More stupid crapola coming from the left. W has done nothing whatsoever deserving impeachment. The lame left...needs to get over it. IT'LL NEVER HAPPEN.


3 posted on 04/27/2006 7:49:55 AM PDT by shield (A wise man's heart is at his RIGHT hand; but a fool's heart at his LEFT. Ecc. 10:2)
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To: Pokey78
But the rot goes back further than that....

Once again,--just how much was Clinton fined $$$$$ for lying in the Paula Jones case?

4 posted on 04/27/2006 7:50:26 AM PDT by prognostigaator
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To: Pokey78

And at least 25% of Free Republic is lining up with the Democrats and demanding impeachment.


5 posted on 04/27/2006 7:51:04 AM PDT by COEXERJ145 (Real Leaders Base Their Decisions on Their Convictions. Wannabes Base Decisions on the Latest Poll.)
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To: Pokey78

A 'rat takeover of the House would be a signal to all our enemies to go full throttle against us.


6 posted on 04/27/2006 7:51:56 AM PDT by Semper Paratus
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To: Pokey78

Oh good grief


7 posted on 04/27/2006 7:52:02 AM PDT by Mo1 (DEMOCRATS: A CULTURE OF TREASON)
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To: Pokey78
still smarting over the 1998 impeachment of Bill Clinton for lying about his office sex life

The Demo/Commie/MSM propaganda masters have triumphed.

The lie is accepted as the truth.

8 posted on 04/27/2006 7:52:03 AM PDT by The Electrician ("Government is the only enterprise in the world which expands in size when its failures increase.")
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To: Pokey78
FYI: Christopher Caldwell a is a senior editor at The Weekly Standard &, I believe, Bob Novak's son-in-law.

Are you serious?

9 posted on 04/27/2006 7:54:21 AM PDT by Mo1 (DEMOCRATS: A CULTURE OF TREASON)
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To: Pokey78
There is, IMO, one way for Bush to be impeached. Namely, if he insists on continuing to undercut the House GOP members on amnesty and border security and they end up caving to what he wants. That, IMO, could lead to the GOP losing the House in the 2006 elections, giving the Dems the ability to impeach Bush.

So the irony is, Bush holds his impeachment destiny in his hands - and is hurting his own prospects by his actions.

10 posted on 04/27/2006 7:56:19 AM PDT by dirtboy (If border security first is good enough for the GOP House, it's good enough for me!)
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To: Pokey78

The Lewinski didn't get him impeached, it was lying about it to a Grand Jury. The left seems obsessed with BJ's.


11 posted on 04/27/2006 7:56:25 AM PDT by mortal19440
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To: shield
IT'LL NEVER HAPPEN.

On the contrary, I think it will, if the Dems take over the House.

Which would please the troglodyte element on FR who have their shorts in a wad over immigration.

Have you not read all the noobs and 2004 sign-ups who are cheering for a Democrat House?

Should that come about, I certainly hope that those miscreants are flushed from this place.

12 posted on 04/27/2006 7:56:46 AM PDT by sinkspur (Things are about to happen that will answer all your questions and solve all your problems.)
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To: Mo1

Unless there is another one.

13 posted on 04/27/2006 7:57:03 AM PDT by Pokey78 (‘FREE [INSERT YOUR FETID TOTALITARIAN BASKET-CASE HERE]’)
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To: Pokey78
Voters tell pollsters by an unprecedented 13-point margin that they’d rather see Democrats running things.

Huh? There's nothing unprecedented about it. It took me all of two minutes worth of research to find that in May 2004, a TIME/CNN poll gave Democrats a 13-point lead on the generic congressional ballot, and a month later an LA Times poll put the Democrats up by 19 points.

14 posted on 04/27/2006 7:57:05 AM PDT by BlackRazor
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To: Mo1
That he's a senior editor at the Weekly Std. surprises me.

That he's Bob Novak's son-in-law doesn't.

15 posted on 04/27/2006 7:57:18 AM PDT by Mr. Mojo
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To: shield
His plan for warrantless wiretaps of al-Qa’eda has compromised the privacy of countless ordinary Americans who receive calls in Arabic via portable satellite phone from tribal areas of the Hindu Kush...

Surely the protests of these countless ordinary Americans will be enough impetus for impeachment, I mean how many of you don't get calls in Arabic from the Hindu Kush? Wait, there goes my satellite phone, gotta run.
16 posted on 04/27/2006 7:57:52 AM PDT by Old North State
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To: Pokey78

He looks more like his son then his son inlaw


17 posted on 04/27/2006 7:58:34 AM PDT by Mo1 (DEMOCRATS: A CULTURE OF TREASON)
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To: COEXERJ145

Yes and it's beyond disgusting. Sometimes looks like the DU board.


18 posted on 04/27/2006 7:58:50 AM PDT by dc-zoo
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To: Pokey78

Hehehehehe ... wait until they figure out that President Cheney is the light at the end of that tunnel. Nah, it won't matter 'cause all they are seeking is a quid quo pro for Clinton's asterisk.


19 posted on 04/27/2006 7:59:11 AM PDT by NonValueAdded ("Too soon to remember??? How about TOO SOON TO FORGET!" from Mr. Silverback)
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To: Mo1

Apparently so. Referenced here:

http://punditwatch.blogspot.com/2002_04_01_punditwatch_archive.html


20 posted on 04/27/2006 7:59:22 AM PDT by BunnySlippers
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