Yesterday’s disclosures by Patrick Fitzgerald, confirming what many of us have suspected for years about Bush’s culpability in using intelligence for political purposes, has crystallized the argument that Democrats can make to nationalize the November election against vulnerable GOP incumbents. After yesterday, the message is quite simple:
“America can’t afford an untrustworthy president and a rubber stamp Republican Congress.”
The best the GOP can do to defend Bush is to issue a release this morning making the widely swallowed assertion that Bush has the authority to declassify information as he sees fit, and that Fitzgerald hasn’t said Bush authorized the outing of Valerie Plame. Yet this lame defense ignores the lies Bush has told about this and many other things, and overlooks the fact that this same administration is going after reporters for allegedly publishing leaked national security information.
The Post noted in its story this morning, as did the New York Times, ABC News, and the Los Angeles Times that Bush was now accused of participating in a leak of national security information, while he himself criticizes others for allegedly doing the same thing. The Post also notes this morning that the Administration has now admitted they may very well be wiretapping purely domestic calls by Americans inside the country without a court order, which is in violation of federal law. Both reinforce the theme that this president cannot be trusted, and America cannot afford a rubber stamp Congress enabling such a leader, especially when this Congress cannot discharge its basic duties due to infighting amongst themselves.
http://www.theleftcoaster.com/archives/007306.php