The Patriot Act Keeps on Giving

This won't surprise anyone here, but I found this telling:

On the February 15 edition of Fox News' Special Report with Brit Hume, Fox News national correspondent Catherine Herridge uncritically reported the assertion by Justice Department officials that "the decision to force out" seven U.S. attorneys recently "was based on, quote, 'performance-related issues.' " But contrary to the Justice Department's assertion, Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty has conceded that performance played no role in at least one of those cases: the forced resignation of H.E. "Bud" Cummins III as U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas. Moreover, the Justice Department has provided no evidence publicly backing up the claim of "performance-related issues," and, according to a February 14 McClatchy Newspapers article, "at least five of [the U.S. attorneys who were fired] received positive job evaluations before they were ordered to step down."

Cummins was replaced by J. Timothy Griffin, a former research director for the Republican National Committee and White House senior adviser Karl Rove. During a February 6 Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on matter, McNulty said that regarding the Cummins replacement, "the fact is that there was a change made there that was not connected to, as was said, the performance of the incumbent, but more related to the opportunity to provide a fresh start with a new person in that position."

According to a February 16 Arkansas Democrat-Gazette article noted by the weblog TPMMuckraker.com, Griffin, currently serving as the interim U.S. attorney, has decided that he "no longer wants the job permanently" and will not submit his name for Senate confirmation. Under a provision in the 2006 renewal of the USA Patriot Act, interim U.S. attorneys can remain in office until the Senate confirms a replacement. Before this provision was enacted, the attorney general could appoint an interim U.S. attorney who could remain in office for up to 120 days, after which the local federal district court could appoint someone to serve until a permanent successor was confirmed. The provision was reportedly added by the office of then-Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Arlen Specter (R-PA), who said at the February 6 Judiciary Committee hearing that a member of his staff had inserted the provision without his knowledge. On February 15, Sen. John Kyl (R-AZ) blocked Democratic efforts to pass legislation that would reverse the provision's changes.

Media Matters has all the rest of the anti-Constitutionalist details.

Democrats had better play it smart, and hire the staffers it takes to make sure other little gifts like these don't slip through whatever "compromise" bills come out of committee. I am sick and tired of laws made by unelected, unknown staffers and lobbyists who seem to have more control over the legislative process than the people actually holding office.

I know they're busy doing really important work like fundraising and stuff, but it would be really nice if legislators actually read the stuff they're voting on.

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B-but Spector is a "moderate" Republican!

Surely, surely a principled man like Arlen Spector wouldn't hijack the USA Patriot Act in a crude attempt to gut US Attorneys' offices when they investigate Republicans?

Oh, wait... Spector's office added the text. The staffers. Fuck 'em. I hope they're all fry cooks or taxi drivers now.

No authoritarians were tortured in the writing of this post.

"First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, then you win." -- Mahatma Gandhi

Say...

"Spector’s office added the text"

I thought you had to be, like, elected or something to write laws.

But I still believe
And I will rise up with fists!!

But I still believe
And I will rise up with fists!!

That's pre-9/11 thinking, star

Back in the days when we had a Constitution, 'n' laws, 'n' stuff.

No authoritarians were tortured in the writing of this post.

"First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, then you win." -- Mahatma Gandhi