Archive for the 'Politics' Category

Bush Administration fires U.S. attorneys

Feb 27, 2007 in Politics, North America, Law

The Bush Administration recently fired seven U.S. attorneys. Firing a U.S. attorney is a drastic and rare action usually taken only in extraordinary circumstances (by comparison, of the 486 U.S. attorneys appointed between 1981 and 2006, only 3 were fired). The seven fired U.S. attorneys had solid resumes and good records, and some were replaced by candidates with weaker credentials but strong Republican connections. Particularly alarming was the dismissal of H.E. Cummins, a distinguished and well-respected U.S. attorney in Little Rock, Arkansas. Mr. Cummins was replaced with J. Timothy Griffin, a former deputy to Karl Rove who has limited legal experience but did opposition research for the Republican National Committee.

The position of U.S. attorney is a powerful and prestigious post; U.S. attorneys prosecute headline-grabbing cases involving terrorism, corporate misgovernance, corruption, and other high-profile crimes. U.S. attorneys have traditionally been insulated from political pressures and executive meddling, but Bush’s recent purges were made possible by a little-known provision of the Patriot Act that allows the president to appoint interim U.S. attorneys for an indefinite period without Senate confirmation. Adam Cohen’s column in the New York Times suggests three theories for this “political purge”:

1. Helping friends. Ms. Lam (one of the fired attorneys) had already put one powerful Republican congressman in jail and was investigating other powerful politicians. The Justice Department, unpersuasively, claims that it was unhappy about Ms. Lam’s failure to bring more immigration cases. Meanwhile, Ms. Lam has been replaced with an interim prosecutor whose résumé shows almost no criminal law experience, but includes her membership in the Federalist Society, a conservative legal group.

2. Candidate recruitment. U.S. attorney is a position that can make headlines and launch political careers. Congressional Democrats suspect that the Bush administration has been pushing out long-serving U.S. attorneys to replace them with promising Republican lawyers who can then be run for Congress and top state offices.

3. Presidential politics. The Justice Department concedes that Mr. Cummins was doing a good job in Little Rock. An obvious question is whether the administration was more interested in his successor’s skills in opposition political research — let’s not forget that Arkansas has been lucrative fodder for Republicans in the past — in time for the 2008 elections.

One of the greatest aspects of the system of government established by our founding fathers is the seperation of powers into executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government. No branch of government can amass too much power, and each branch acts as a check on the other branches. The process of appointing federal judges and U.S. attorneys (Presidential nomination followed by Congressional confirmation) is an important element of this separation of powers. The magnitude of Bush’s successful attempt to bypass the process can’t be understated. The Patriot Act’s sweeping expansions of executive power have enabled Bush to install cronies in powerful positions with the authority to investigate and prosecute (or, more importantly, the authority to refrain from doing so). These developments are alarming not only because of these immediate consequences, but because of the precedent they set in upsetting the delicate balance of authority that is a hallmark of American democracy. Though such excesses would normally be regarded as policies unbecoming of the United States, they seem to have become a sad reality of life under the Bush Administration.

A Muslim in Congress? What would the framers of the Constitution think?

Jan 10, 2007 in Politics, Religion, Law

The Dennis Pragers and Virgil Goodes of the world would do well to note that the prospect of a Muslim attaining elected office was raised during the course of constitutional debates in the formative period of the United States. After the Constitutional Convention presented its draft Constitution to the states for ratification in 1787, the North Carolina state legislature debated the merits of a guarantee of religious freedom and a bar against religious tests as a condition to holding public office, provisions the Convention’s draft did not contain. Rep. Henry Abbot, a Baptist minister and a proponent of a religious freedom clause, observed:

The exclusion of religious tests is by many thought dangerous and impolitic. They suppose that if there be no religious test required, pagans, deists, and Mahometans [Muslims] might obtain offices among us, and that the senators and representatives might all be pagans. Every person employed by the general and state governments is to take an oath to support the former. Some are desirous to know how and by whom they are to swear, since no religious tests are required–whether they are to swear by Jupiter, Juno, Minerva, Proserpine [sic], or Pluto. . . I would be glad [if] some gentleman would endeavor to obviate these objections, in order to satisfy the religious part of the society.

State commissioner James Iredell (who would later serve on the United States Supreme Court) addressed the concerns mentioned by Abbot:

But it is objected that the people of America may, perhaps, choose representatives who have no religion at all, and that pagans and Mahometans may be admitted into offices. But how is it possible to exclude any set of men, without taking away that principle of religious freedom which we ourselves so warmly contend for? This is the foundation on which persecution has been raised in every part of the world.

Governor Samuel Johnston elaborated:

Those who are Mahometans, or any others who are not professors of the Christian religion, can never be elected to the office of President, or other high office, but in one of two cases. First, if the people of America lay aside the Christian religion altogether, it may happen. Should this unfortunately take place, the people will choose such men as think as they do themselves. Another case is, if any persons of such descriptions should, notwithstanding their religion, acquire the confidence and esteem of the people of America by their good conduct and practice of virtue, they may be chosen.

This debate in the North Carolina legislature would play a pivotal role in shaping the notion of separation of church and state that would come to be a founding principle of American democracy. The legislature ultimately decided that a guarantee of religious freedom was a necessity, and North Carolina withheld its ratification of the Constitution on the grounds that it contained no affirmative declaration of rights. The Bill of Rights–and with it, the provisions guaranteeing religious freedom that would come to be known as the establishment clause and the free exercise clause–was subsequently added in response to North Carolina’s objections, and North Carolina became the 12th state to ratify on November 21, 1789. The rest, as they say, is history, though it seems to have escaped Dennis Prager and Virgil Goode.

Immigrants emerging as tech entrepreneurship leaders

Jan 05, 2007 in Technology, Politics

According to a study by researchers at Berkeley, 47 percent of venture-backed technology start-ups have immigrant founders. In Silicon Valley, a staggering 52 percent of technology start-ups have at least one immigrant as a key founder. Advocates of limiting immigration would do well to observe the role immigrants have played in building the world’s technological and entrepreneurial hub and the impact their contributions have had on the American economy.

From the San Jose Mercury-News.

Keith Ellison to take oath on Jefferson’s Quran

Jan 04, 2007 in Politics

keith_ellison.jpgThe more I see and read of Keith Ellison, the more I like him. He’s handling himself beautifully in what can only be described as an extremely difficult situation.

Islam is perhaps the only religion in America that can be openly denounced and condemned in mainstream political circles, and yet Keith Ellison is a practicing Muslim who has been elected to Congress. Ellison’s decision to take his oath of office on the Quran has driven pundits, commentators, and at least one of his fellow congressmen crazy, generating a full-blown controversy. Rep. Virgil Goode (R-VA) wrote a letter to his constituents condemning Ellison’s decision to take his oath on the Quran and linked the issue to his views on restricting immigration. According to Goode, “if American citizens don’t wake up and adopt the Virgil Goode position on immigration there will likely be many more Muslims elected to office and demanding the use of the Koran” (Ellison is an African-American convert to Islam whose family has been in the United States since the eighteenth century). In response to Goode’s statements, Ellison simply said that Goode had some incorrect ideas about Islam and that he looked forward to meeting him (which he was apparently serious about). When asked whether he thought Goode was a bigot, Ellison responded, “I don’t know the fellow and I’d rather just say he has a lot to learn about Islam.”

In a brilliant move, Ellison will take his oath on a copy of the Quran that was owned by Thomas Jefferson, the third President of the United States. I can’t think of a better way to silence your critics without saying a word. This symbolic gesture by Ellison hammers home the idea that the founding fathers did not subscribe to the apocalyptic worldview that many of Ellison’s “patriotic” critics apparently adhere to. Jefferson once wrote (in a letter to the Sultan of Morocco, no less), “All religions are equally independent here, our laws knowing no distinction of country, of classes among individuals and with nations, our [creed] is justice and reciprocity.” Better yet, Jefferson was from Virginia, and his estate (Monticello) and the University he helped found (the University of Virginia) are located within Goode’s district.

But Thomas Jefferson must have obviously hated America, right?

President Gerald Ford dead at 93

Dec 27, 2006 in Michigan Football, Politics, Current Events & History

America has lost an upstanding statesman, and the State and University of Michigan have lost one of their brightest sons. Former president Gerald Ford died today at age 93. He was vice president 1973-1974 and president 1974-1977. He also played center on the University of Michigan’s 1932 and 1933 national championship football teams.

RIP #38 and #48.

Response toward Barack Obama amongst African-Americans “lukewarm”

Dec 22, 2006 in Politics

Interesting article on African-American attitudes toward Barack Obama:

Obama’s toughest sell for White House bid may be to other blacks