Gonzales' shaky Justice
Monica Goodling admitted asking department applicants about their political views. The attorney general has his own boundary issues.
May 25, 2007
IN ADMITTING TO the House Judiciary Committee that she "crossed a line" by posing political questions to applicants for career positions at the Justice Department, Monica M. Goodling helped explain why she was such a reluctant witness. But the committed conservative who served as White House liaison for Atty. Gen. Alberto R. Gonzales also could have been describing her former boss. He too has crossed a line, albeit a blurrier one.
The boundary Goodling transgressed was the bright line separating the lawful from the unlawful. A similar — but much more serious — transgression occurred if one or more of eight dismissed U.S. attorneys were fired for targeting Republicans or for not targeting Democrats. Goodling echoed administration denials of that worst-case scenario, which would involve line-crossing big time (as Vice President Dick Cheney might say). In fact, it would be obstruction of justice.
Unfortunately, the Bush administration has invited dark speculation with its shifting explanations of the dismissals and Gonzales' assertion that he was essentially AWOL in the process. That's why it remains vital that Karl Rove and former White House counsel Harriet E. Miers testify on the record before Congress about their involvement, if any, in the purge.
Yet even if the firings weren't designed to thwart prosecutions like the one that led to a prison sentence for former Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham (R-Rancho Santa Fe), it's obvious that partisan politics has intruded in an unusual way in the operation of this Justice Department. Gonzales by most accounts has been demonstrably less vigilant than his predecessors — including John Ashcroft, a former U.S. senator — in policing the line between politics and legal policy.
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