Political Pot Pourri: Rove, the Supremes & A Silent Scream
Coming out of the 4th of July weekend, a half-dozen thoughts worked their way to the forefront:
1. THE LOVE OF PARADES
I love old-fashioned, small-town 4th of July parades. When we lived in Northern California's San Geronimo Valley in
Marin County, we participated, along with everybody else in the small rural community of Woodacre, in as Norman
Rockwell-like a parade as you can imagine. This year, we were at the somewhat larger one in suburban Corte Madera.
There are floats and marching bands and bright-red firetrucks, kids on red-white-and-blue-streamered bicycles and local
politicians waving from open cars -- the whole nine yards. Though there are exceptions, it is rare to find in many of
the thousands of such all-American parades any public mention of the underlying meaning of the celebration and its
possible connection to our current struggle for liberty in the Bush era. (Although in recent years, one has been able to
find the occasional anti-Bush T-shirt and protest sign, and on this year's 4th, I actually saw an anti-war float in the
parade, drawing quite a few cheers.)
I sometimes talk with teenagers and younger kids at these parades -- sometimes even their parents -- asking them if they
know what we're celebrating. Mostly I get blank stares, or references to fireworks, barbecue picnics, and watermelons.
It breaks my heart as a former teacher to realize yet again how ill-educated our citizens are when it comes to American
history and to the rights guaranteed by the Constitution. Rarely does one find citizens connecting the dots about our
country's civil liberties, the Constitutional guarantees of due process, and where all that derived from -- reaction to
tyrannical imperial rule from England, and the desire of the American colonists to make sure such heavy-handed
big-government excesses never would be permitted to happen again.
In past years, when I engaged in conversation with some paradegoers, especially the adults, about how our current King
George was running rough-shod over the Constitution and the accompanying Bill of Rights, often they said they were
appalled to hear that. They just hadn't been paying that much attention to what was going on, they said; they figured
that Bush, leading the country's "war on terrorism," was doing what has to be done and they trusted him not to go
overboard.
But this year, as the current polls reflect, the reaction of the public is quite different. Nearly 60% think the war in
Iraq is a mistake, and 42% nationally, according to the Zogby poll, think impeachment hearings are in order if Bush lied
our country into that war -- which certainly seems to be the case, given the overwhelming evidence from the leaked,
top-secret Downing Street Memos from inside Tony Blair's war-council meetings.
Middle-class people I've talked with in recent days (and letters I get, especially from moderate Republicans) seem more
leery of Bush's pronouncements, more suspicious of his policies and agenda, more willing to entertain the likelihood
that all governments lie big time, and that while most such lies do little immediate damage, Bush's lies are getting
tens of thousands of people killed and maimed, and spending the U.S. into humongous debt.
2. ROVE'S POTENTIAL LEGAL PROBLEMS
Let's forget for a second the hypocrisy of the GOP's going after President Clinton because of private, consensual sex.
Clinton, the Republican pack finally came to spin, wasn't being impeached because of his erotic misbehavior but because
he lied under oath in denying it.
Now we're not quite there yet -- we don't know precisely what Karl Rove said, to whom and when -- but let's suppose that
Rove lied to a grand jury and/or the FBI or other official investigators in connection with the outing of covert CIA
operative Valerie Plame. (Reportedly, Rove has been named in the notes of Time Magazine's Matthew Cooper's as one of key
White House officals with whom he talked about Plame just days before rightwing columnist Robert Novak revealed her name
and job.)
Again, just speculating here -- since we don't know if the special prosecutor is going after Rove because he may be one
of the the Plame-leakers or because he participated in a grand cover-up of whoever did the leaking. But If Rove did
indeed lie under oath or to the FBI, what are the chances that Bush didn't know? And will the upright moralists of the
GOP demand Rove's head, will they urge he be removed from his White House position? You know the answer as well as I do:
There will be a rally-'round-Karl chorus from the GOP, denying, delaying, smearing others, etc.
And, if worse comes to worst in this scenario, Rove, if caught red-handed, may attempt to escape a probable felony
indictment on the leaking charge by saying that he thought Plame's CIA status was well-known in Washington; that way,
he'd be off the legal hook, since in order to fall afoul of the law, he would have to have KNOWINGLY revealed her secret
identity.
And if that doesn't work, and/or if Rove is indicted on a coverup charge, there's always the good ol' presidential
pardon, a conflict-of-interest Republican speciality when the heat gets intense. (Ford pardoned Nixon in the Watergate
scandal, Bush#1 pardoned Caspar Weinberger in the Irangate scandal -- before he'd even been charged with anything.)
So, Rove -- one of the most hated but most feared politicos in America -- eventually may escape the legal noose
currently locating itself around his neck. But, Washington politics being what it is, one can expect (as in the
Watergate scandal decades ago) that, by turning over one rock, a whole lot of other smelly scandals will be revealed.
Just think of it: Rove on trial, Kenneth Starr as his chief counsel, with a witness list that might well include Robert
Novak, Ambassador Joseph Wilson IV (Plame's husband that Rove was angry at), Jeff Gannon/Guckert, Judith Miller, Chris
Matthews (who reported that Rove told him that Plame "was fair game" after her husband criticized the Administration),
Bill Frist, Scott McClellan, John McCain, Ken Mehlman, Ralph Reed, et al. What a show that would be!
3. THE PARTIES SWITCH POSITIONS
How to explain the whiplash-like reversal of the two major parties in recent years? The Democrats, supposedly the more
liberal, these days in many ways is the more conservative -- trying to "conserve" what is best about Constitutional
government, our natural environment, our adherence to open and honest rule. The Republicans, meanwhile, have turned into
the radical party, trying to "reform" or eviscerate much of the popular New Deal/Great Society programs, and carrying
out multiple wars abroad.
It used to be that the Republicans were the party of small-government and states' rights. They were suspicious of
privacy intrusions by the Washington bureaucrats. Now it is the Democrats who rail about the central government running
roughshod over citizens' civil liberties.
It used to be that the Republicans were leery of foreign military adventures, wanting to concentrate on taking care of
our own citizens and society first. Now it is the Democrats who are denouncing the Administration's war-making abroad,
and Bush policies and philosophy ("pre-emptive" wars) that will yield more such conflicts.
It used to be that Republicans were the party of budgetary restraint and living within one's means. Now it's the
Democrats pointing loudly at the trillions of dollars of debt being racked up on Bush's watch, in order to afford two
wars and huge tax-relief to the already-wealthy.
It used to be that the Republicans, big on religion and "family values," were the party of moral absolutes, and the
Democrats were tarred with the "moral-relativism" brush. But those currently in control of the GOP are quite willing to
trim their moral sails to whatever wind will bring them victory. The only goal is winning, and the ends justify the
means. This is true with regard to Iraq, and to domestic disputes as well. The Democrats thus take great delight in
pointing up the "hypocrisy" of the Republicans in violating their own traditions and positions, in the hunt for victory.
Strange how the Republicans, captured by the far right wing of the party, morphed into what they used to detest --
big-government coercers, reckless military adventurerers abroad, intrusive collectors of all sorts of private data about
its citizens, moral relativists -- and the Democrats have become the old-fashioned conservators of what is best about
America. Difficult to fathom. If anybody has any solid explanations that explain this shift, I'd love to hear them.
4. THE SUPREME CULTURAL BATTLEGROUND
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor mistakenly has been viewed by the mainstream press as a "centrist" on the Supreme Court; the
awful realization is that so far has the right wing moved the parameters that the "center" has shifted. In truth,
O'Connor was a staunch conservative, just not one of those frothing-at-the-mouth rightists currently holding the reins
of GOP power. One can reasonably expect that she will be replaced by someone more attuned to Bush/Cheney's stark,
ideologically-based view of the world.
One would like to believe that Bush, having suffered a number of major legislative defeats in recent months (on Bolton,
Social Security, filibuster, etc.), might want to nominate someone reasonably mainstream, just to get a quick victory in
hand. But Bush apparently still believes he has a lot of political "capital" to spend, and so he can afford to push
someone he knows will antagonize Democrats and traditional-conservative and moderate GOP senators.
My guess is that Bush's first choice will be someone on the far right edge of judicial philosophy, to get the Democratic
opposition to say they will filibuster. At which point, Bush will try to regroup the Republicans to move to the "nuclear
option" of changing the rules in the Senate to eliminate filibusters, and thus require only a majority vote for a
nominee. If none of that works, he will nominate someone merely thoroughly objectionable but not a Bork-like or Clarence
Thomas-like Neanderthal.
But who knows what Rove are cooking up in the White House kitchen? Perhaps they'll go with a senator (Cornyn of Texas), or a former
solicitor-general (Olsen), or a Hispanic toady (Gonzales). The current betting favorite is Gonzo.
We'll probably find out for sure later this week. Buckle your seat-belts; the next few months are liable to be a very
bumpy ride.
5. CONFUSION ON IRAQ POLICY
One wonders whether the inconsistent statements coming out of the White House about what's happening in Iraq are planned
to create confusion in the public mind, or are evidence that this gang can't shoot straight even with each other.
Cheney proclaims vociferously that the insurgency in Iraq is in its "last throes." The commanding military officer,
General Abizaid, on the ground in Iraq, says the insurgency is about the same as it was six months ago --i.e., healthy
and active, able to mount major operations. Rumsfeld, who at the start of the war said that the U.S. should be wrapping
up the post-war operation within six months, now says it may take 12 years. Bush just talks vaguely about "staying the
course" and "completing the mission," as if constant repetition magically will make it happen.
Maybe they figure it doesn't matter what they say anymore, since their base remains fairly solidly with them, and nobody
else takes seriously what lies come out of their mouths.
What is interesting is how quickly Bush has lost the trust of the American public on the war. With his backside covered
because of that public revulsion toward the war, Republican Senator Chuck Hagel can come right out and say that the Bush
Administration has no coherent policy in Iraq, that it's being made up on the fly, and that the U.S. is losing the war.
It took many years to get to this point during the Vietnam era.
So, while there are denials all the way around, it's not surprising that so desperate are the Busheviks to do something,
anything, to change the dynamic in Iraq that they're willing even to talk with insurgent representatives, as they've
been doing in recent weeks.
As with Vietnam, this Iraq story is one that keeps getting worse. Eventually, as with that war, the American people will
have had enough, will resent the deceptive way the country was bamboozled into attacking Iraq and the incompetent way
the invasion and occupation have been managed, and will not put up with more deaths and maimings of our soldiers. Then
the citizens will demand withdrawal. My guess is that this will happen sooner rather than later.
And who will the Bushies blame for the Iraq debacle? Not themselves, you can be sure; they don't make mistakes. Yep, you
got it: "weak-kneed liberals" and the "liberal media." Stay tuned.
6. A SILENT SCREAM?
I couldn't believe my ears the other day while watching Bush's Iraq-policy speech at Fort Bragg. What I was hearing
was...nothing. Usually, Bush's hand-picked audiences cheer loudly and often during his speeches. But this time, the
thousands of beret-clad troops in the audience sat on their hands.
Polite applause started once, initiated by Bush Administration plants in the audience, and that was it.
I almost pitied Bush. It reminded me of watching a stand-up comedian "dying" in front of an audience that didn't think
he was funny.
The audience was tailor-made for a Bush military speech: Officers and young men and women in uniform. But this time,
they remained mute, and their silence said more than Bush's speech about the mood in this country toward the Iraq War
and the Administration's mishandling of it, from the deceptions and lies underlying it to the bumbled occupation to the
current quagmire.
These are soldiers who could be sent down that rathole, and/or who know those already there, and their silence made it
plain that they didn't want any part of it, and didn't accept Bush's platitudes about the war. Good on them!
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Bernard Weiner, Ph.D., has taught politics and international relations at various universities, worked as a
writer-editor with the San Francisco Chronicle, and currently co-edits The Crisis Papers ( www.crisispapers.org). To comment, write crisispapers@comcast.net .