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Absolute
Power
by
David Limbaugh
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From
Absolute Power, by David Limbaugh:
This
book is about the consummate corruption and politicization
of the Clinton-Reno Justice Department. It examines
how this enforcement arm of the executive branch
was used as both a sword and shield for the Clinton-Gore
administrations innumerable crimes and abuses
of constitutional power.
Much
lip service was paid to the rule of law
during the Clinton years, primarily to distract
attention from how often it was undermined. The
rule of law is the very core of our constitutional
system. It is a maxim holding that we are a government
of laws, not men. This means that no man is above
the law and that the law restrains government
itself. As James Madison wrote in Federalist
No. 51: In framing a government which is
to be administered by men over men, the great
difficulty lies in this: You must first enable
the government to control the governed; and in
the next place oblige it to control itself.
The
framers understood that no constitution, regardless
of how brilliantly crafted, could completely prevent
abuses. John Adams said, Our Constitution
was made only for a moral and religious people.
It is wholly inadequate to the government of any
other.
This
book examines the record of the Clinton-Gore administration
in light of our constitutional history, focusing
on President Clintons executive abuses-in
particular, those involving the complicity of
the Justice Department. The Clinton-Gore administrations
rampant corruption and trampling of the rule of
law permeated the entire executive branch. Whether
conscious conspirator or unwitting puppet, Janet
Reno dedicated the awesome enforcement power of
the Justice Department to protect and defend President
Clintons multiple crimes and abuses of power.
She prostituted Justice into a base political
arm of the administration.
In
1993, shortly after she was installed as attorney
general, Janet Reno sent an unmistakable signal
that her Justice Department would primarily serve
the political ends of Bill Clinton rather than
the ends of justice. At once, she fired all ninety-three
of the countrys United States attorneys.
According to no less an authority than Ted Olson,
President George Bushs chief post-election
attorney, Renos move was extreme and unprecedented.
In order to maintain continuity in thousands
of pending prosecutions, and as a statement to
the public that elections do not influence routine
law enforcement, the nations top prosecutors
are traditionally replaced only after their successors
have been located, appointed, and confirmed by
the Senate. On instructions from the White House
(she claimed it was a joint decision;
no one believes that), Reno ordered all 93 to
leave in ten days. There could not have been a
clearer signal that the Clinton campaign war room
had taken over law enforcement in America.
The
firings were only the beginning. Throughout Clintons
two terms, the Clinton-Reno Justice Department,
instead of dispassionately enforcing the law,
waged war against the administrations political
and legal enemies.
When President Clinton wanted to practice character
assassination on the White House Travel Office
staff, Ken Starr, or Linda Tripp, he relied on
the Justice Department for logistical support.
When frustrated by a recalcitrant Republican Congress,
President Clinton used Janet Reno to orchestrate
end runs around the legislative branch-misusing
the judicial system to usurp legislative prerogatives,
such as with their wholesale war on the tobacco
industry.
When
Clinton ducked responsibility for his excesses,
as at Waco, the buck stopped with Janet Reno rather
than the president. But if the polls swung in
her favor, he swooped in to take personal credit.
When the president became embroiled in a personal
lawsuit, he enlisted the aid of Renos department
to file briefs on his behalf. When he was at legal
war with the independent counsel, Reno joined
forces with the president rather than the independent
counsel whom she was legally obliged to assist.
Throughout the Clinton-Gore administration, Reno
was complicit in the assertion of phony legal
privileges and disruptions of the judicial process.
When
congressional and independent counsel investigations
struck close to the administration, Reno conveniently
assumed jurisdiction over the investigation and
became the presidents surrogate stonewaller.
While pretending to conduct investigations, she
blocked Congress, denying it access to critical
information and stalled long enough to stifle
whatever momentum and progress investigators had
achieved. Just as Clinton failed to maintain a
wall of separation between his private and public
lives, he misappropriated Justice to do his private
dirty work and refused to keep his private attorneys
separate from the Justice Department.
Even
when matters as serious as national security and
illegal foreign campaign contributions were involved,
Reno, instead of performing her constitutional
duty to enforce and uphold the law, used her office
to insulate the Clinton-Gore administration from
scrutiny and resulting accountability. When Charles
La Bella, the Special Task Force attorney she
appointed to investigate the campaign finance
scandal, recommended the appointment of an independent
counsel, she brazenly ignored the request and
denied Congress access to La Bellas recommending
memo.
Indeed,
just as this book is going to press, New York
Times columnist William Safire is reporting
that on December 20, 2000, soon after Al Gores
concession, three top Justice Department aides,
including an assistant attorney general, ordered
one of the last remaining independent counsels,
David Barrett, to stop his grand jury investigation.
Barrett refused and Justice is apparently in a
panic, especially with the prospect that the incorruptible
John Ashcroft, if confirmed, will be taking the
helm at Justice. Barrett is reportedly investigating
allegations that the Justice Department pressured
the Internal Revenue Service not to cooperate
with his investigation into where disgraced Clinton
appointee Henry Cisneros got the money to pay
his former mistress-payments that led to Cisneross
prosecution and resignation. Justice allegedly
told the IRS not to allow Barrett to see all of
Cisneross tax returns. So, as Safire asks,
Was Justice colluding with the IRS in protecting
any Clinton appointees or heavy contributors from
charges of tax fraud? Equal justice,
Safire reminds us, demands the law to move
in, not to move on.
The
Clinton-Reno Justice Department, from Waco to
Elian-with Travelgate, Chinagate, Monicagate,
and the illegal war against tobacco in between-was
one continuous, perfidious scandal factory. The
republic cannot long endure such corruption and
abuses of power.
While
there have been numerous books about the Clinton
administration and its multitudinous scandals,
there has been no comprehensive case-by-case critique
of the Clinton Justice Department. All of the
sordid details must be exposed and articulated
in a way that is accessible and intelligible to
the average reader. If we cant succeed in
bringing the late administration to account for
its misdeeds, at least we can attempt to deter
future administrations from such illegality by
publicly exposing the abuses of the Clinton-Reno
Justice Department.
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