Progressive Minds

Blogging live, from somewhere in the reality-based community. Speaking truth to power. You've entered the real "no spin zone." Republicans beware!

2007/5/23

Alberto Gonzales to Monica Goodling:Wink, Wink. Nod. Nod. Do you remember what I remember?

@ 07:07 PM (14 months, 6 days ago)

Today Monica Goodling, a former Department of Justice official who is right smack dab in the middle of the firing of eight U.S. attorneys, testified before the House Judiciary Committe.

Goodling had been granted partial immunity.  And during her testimony, she said she became uncomfortable when, during a meeting, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales seemed to be trying to get the both of them to discuss their recollections of what happened during the purging of the attorneys.

From the Associated Press courtesy of MSNBC:

A former Justice Department official at the center of the uproar over prosecutor firings told House investigators Wednesday that Attorney General Alberto Gonzales tried to review his story of the dismissals with her at a time when lawmakers were homing in on conflicting accounts.

“It made me a little uncomfortable,” Monica Goodling, Gonzales’ former White House liaison, said of her conversation with the attorney general just before she took a leave of absence in March. “I just did not know if it was appropriate for us to both be discussing our recollections of what had happened.”

-snip-

Goodling said for the first time Wednesday that Gonzales did review the story of the firings with her at an impromptu meeting she requested in his office a few days before she took a leave of absence.

“I was somewhat paralyzed. I was distraught, and I felt like I wanted to make a transfer,” Goodling recalled during a packed hearing of the House Judiciary Committee.

Gonzales, she said, indicated he would think about Goodling’s request.

“He then proceeded to say, ‘Let me tell you what I can remember,’ and he laid out for me his general recollection ... of some of the process” of the firings, Goodling added. When Gonzales finished, “he asked me if I had any reaction to his iteration.”

Goodling said the conversation made her uncomfortable because she was aware that she, Gonzales and others would be called by Congress to testify.

It should also be noted that last month, Gonzales told the Senate Judiciary Committee that he steered clear of aides who might be called to testify about the attorney purge. 

From the AP courtesy of MSNBC:

Goodling’s dramatic story about her final conversation with Gonzales brought questions from panel members about whether he had tried to align her story with his and whether he was truthful in his own congressional testimony.

Gonzales told the Senate Judiciary Committee last month that he didn’t know the answers to some questions about the firings because he was steering clear of aides — such as Goodling — who were likely to be questioned.

“I haven’t talked to witnesses because of the fact that I haven’t wanted to interfere with this investigation and department investigations,” Gonzales told the panel.

One other additional note from today's hearing: Monica Goodling admitted that she "crossed the line" (read: BROKE THE LAW) because she tood into consideration the party affiliations of candidates who were being considered for career prosecutor positions. 

Ex-aide says Gonzales talked about firings

Goodling also says she 'crossed the line' and that McNulty was inaccurate

2007/5/10

National Journal: Administration Withheld Emails, Re: Rove's Involvement in Getting His Protege Installed As US Attorney

@ 07:55 PM (14 months, 19 days ago)

According to an article by Murry Waas in the National Journal, the White House and the Department of Justice worked together to conceal from Congress, Karl Rove's involvement in getting his protege Timothy Griffin installed as a U.S. attorney.

From the National Journal:

The Bush administration has withheld a series of e-mails from Congress showing that senior White House and Justice Department officials worked together to conceal the role of Karl Rove in installing Timothy Griffin, a protégé of Rove's, as U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas.

The withheld records show that D. Kyle Sampson, who was then-chief of staff to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, consulted with White House officials in drafting two letters to Congress that appear to have misrepresented the circumstances of Griffin's appointment as U.S. attorney and of Rove's role in supporting Griffin.

Administration Withheld E-Mails About Rove

2007/5/7

Equipment Needed For Kansas Tornado Recovery Is In Iraq

@ 08:57 PM (14 months, 22 days ago)

Of course one of the big news items over the weekend was the devistation in parts of Kansas due to tornados.

And the Governor of Kansas says that much of the equipment needed for the recovery effort is in Iraq.

From CNN.com:

Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius expressed concern that rescue and recovery efforts were being strained because much of the needed equipment has been sent to Iraq.

"When the troops get deployed, the equipment goes with them. So here in Kansas about 50 percent of our trucks are gone. We need trucks. We are missing Humvees, we're missing all kinds of equipment that could help us respond in this kind of emergency," she said.

-snip-

"National Guard are our first responders. They don't have the equipment they need to come in, and it'll just make it that much slower," she said.

The National Guard has said for years that it is short of equipment at home because of deployments to Iraq.

"We weren't fully equipped with all the resources we need before the war started," said Maj. Gen. Tod Bunting of the Kansas National Guard, and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan "further depleted us."

Source:  http://www.cnn.com/2007/WEATHER/05/07/severe.weather/index.html

Thomas Frank wrote a book entitled What's The Matter With Kansas?  How Conservatives Won The Heart of America.  Basically, the book explores how some blue-collar workers in places like Kansas have continued to vote against their own best interests by supporting the GOP.

Perhaps now they will learn the importance of voting FOR their own best interests, not against.

2007/5/4

Why was Rove coaching a DOJ official on their testimony before Congress?

@ 08:21 PM (14 months, 25 days ago)
Under no circumstances can anyone think it appropriate for Karl Rove, nothing more than Bushie's glorified political guru, to be participating in a meeting at the White House in which he coached a top DOJ official on their upcoming testimony before Congress regarding the purge of U.S. attorneys. The White House is clueless if they can't see how inappropriate this is. And even more importantly, the Congress is clueless if they don't subpoena Rove ASAP and compell him to testify.

From Newsweek:

Deputy chief of staff Karl Rove participated in a hastily called meeting at the White House two months ago. The subject: The firing of eight U.S. attorneys last year. The purpose: to coach a top Justice Department official heading to Capitol Hill to testify on the prosecutorial purge on what he should say.

Now some investigators are saying that Rove’s attendance at the meeting shows that the president’s chief political adviser may have been involved in an attempt to mislead Congress—one more reason they are demanding to see his e-mails and force him to testify under oath.

At the March 5, 2007, meeting, White House aides, including counsel Fred Fielding and deputy counsel William Kelley, sought to shape testimony that Principal Associate Deputy Attorney General William Moschella was to give the next day before the House Judiciary Committee.

Although the existence of the White House meeting had been previously disclosed by the Justice Department, Rove’s attendance at the strategy session was not—until both Moschella and Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty talked about it in confidential testimony with congressional investigators last week. Portions of their testimony were read to NEWSWEEK by a Democratic aide who asked not to be identified talking about private matters.


Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18479265/site/newsweek /

2007/5/2

Bush: For Exit Strategies and Timetables Before He Was Against Them

@ 08:06 PM (14 months, 27 days ago)

What a difference a few years make!  Courtesy of Political Wire, check out these quotes from George W. Bush when Bill Clinton was Commander-in-Chief.  Seems like Dear Leader has done a little flipping and flopping when it comes to exit strategies and timetables.

"Victory means exit strategy, and it's important for the president to explain to us what the exit strategy is."

-- George W. Bush, 4/9/99, criticizing President Clinton for not setting a timetable for exiting Kosovo.

"I think it's also important for the president to lay out a timetable as to how long they will be involved and when they will be withdrawn."

-- George W. Bush, 6/5/99

http://politicalwire.com/archives/2007/05/01/historical_quotes_of_the_day.html

Bush Vetoes Full Funding of Troops

@ 07:35 PM (14 months, 27 days ago)

So of course yesterday George W. Bush vetoed a bill which FULLY FUNDED our troops in Iraq.  While most of the focus has been on the portion of the bill that included a timeline for withdrawal from Iraq, it's important to remember that the bill fully funded our troops.

And because George W. Bush doesn't want to be held accountable for his failed war, he put our troops at risk by denying them funding.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070502/ap_on_go_co/us_iraq