Doin' the Karl Rove Dance:
A Chorus Line of "Loyal Bushies"
by Elizabeth de la Vega
 Last week, Americans with access to YouTube were subjected to a once-in-a-lifetime performance by President Bush's senior political adviser Karl Rove. At least, I fervently hope that this event will only happen once in our lifetimes. Watching Rove, at the White House Correspondents' Dinner, bobbing and weaving awkwardly in a pathetic parody of a rapper was painful. However, more excruciating than his routine -- "MC Rove: Doin' the Dance, the Karl Rove Dance" to lyrics supplied by comedian Brad Sherwood -- was the sight of the members of our so-called independent Washington press corps laughing amiably at the antics of a senior presidential aide whose conduct is so universally considered despicable that no one even flinches at ill-timed lines like: "Don't get the jitters/but MC Rove tears the head off of critters." That scene was the stuff of nightmares.
Rove's rap performance was disturbing, yes; but, in the end, it was also relatively brief and harmless. The same cannot be said of the danse macabre he has been directing since the Bush administration took over the White House. We know that Rove is a master of the quick-step and the hustle, but he almost never makes his moves in public. Instead, he has been directing the Bush production from the Office of Political Affairs whose purpose is, according to the White House website, to ensure "that the executive branch and the President are aware of the concerns of the American citizen."
Tomgram: Elizabeth de la Vega, Karl Rove's Danse Macabre
At
the White House Correspondents' Dinner the other night, Karl Rove was
called up on stage and asked to identify himself. "Peter Fitzgerald,"
he promptly said. Then, he corrected himself, "Patrick Fitzgerald"
(That is, Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald, who had just convicted
Vice President Cheney's former right-hand man, I. Lewis Libby.)
The Rove act then continued this way:
Comedian Brad Sherwood: "We just want to ask you some questions about, uh--"
Rove, tauntingly: "Lot's of people want to ask me questions."
Well,
hand Karl the evening's prize for chutzpah. Nonetheless, one of these
days, no matter how the President, Vice President, their top aides,
officials, and advisors circle the wagons, no matter how aggressively
they attack, no matter how many fallback explanations they have ready,
no matter how many email dumps they make, they may be surprised to find
themselves answering some of the questions that Americans increasingly
do want asked.
Sooner or later, ours may look like a United
States v. George W. Bush et al. world. (To some extent, it already
does.) As it happens, that's the prescient title of a remarkable,
bestselling book by Elizabeth de la Vega. A former federal prosecutor,
de la Vega drew up her own hypothetical indictment laying out how the
Bush administration defrauded us into war; convened her own "grand
jury"; and, in a little paperback published late last year, made her
worse-then-Enron case. It will be a defining document of our times and
one that should be in every house in the land.
Meanwhile, de la Vega turns to the question of just what it means to be in a land of "loyal Bushies." - Tom
Doin' the Karl Rove Dance
A Chorus Line of "Loyal Bushies"
by Elizabeth de la Vega
Karl Rove has, for years, been choreographing an elaborate dance
of death for the federal government designed to give life to the
Republican Party, and yet the public remains largely ignorant of his
activities because he so rarely takes the stage. That honor is reserved
for an apparently infinite supply of young Republicans eager to dance
their little hearts out for a chance to get plum appointments. In other
words, the prerequisite for the success of the Bush administration's
extravaganza -- whether in Washington, Iraq, or elsewhere -- has been a
chorus line of "loyal Bushies."
Of course, the term "loyal
Bushie" requires no definition, but one has recently been supplied by
Kyle Sampson, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales's former deputy chief
of staff. Undoubtedly to his everlasting regret, Sampson, who resigned
just prior to his testimony last week before the Senate Judiciary
Committee, used this term to describe those United States Attorneys who
should be retained by the White House because they had "managed well
and exhibited loyalty to the president and attorney general." Those who
"chafed against administration initiatives" were recommended for
removal, according to Sampson; while the rest of the lot, including
U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois and Special Counsel
Patrick Fitzgerald, were unranked.
I spent last Thursday
watching Sampson testify about the White House choreographed firings of
seven U.S. Attorneys who were chafers. I was compelled to watch, even
though, having worked for more than 21 years as an Assistant United
States Attorney myself, I considered the revelation of this latest
outrage to be the least horrific of a long string of horrors carried
out by the Bush administration in the name of the Department of Justice
for the advancement of the Republican Party.
To satisfy the
tobacco lobby, for instance, President Bush's Department of Justice
(DOJ) appointees gutted the most significant case ever brought against
the giant tobacco companies. To assuage the Republican base, Bush's DOJ
brought an unprecedented number of civil rights cases on behalf of
non-minorities, while drastically limiting its traditional
affirmative-action lawsuits. In order to portray themselves as
representatives of the party most likely to make the American people
feel safe -- a cherished nugget of political wisdom from Karl Rove's
constant polling activities -- Bush's Attorneys General have
sanctioned, caused to be carried out, and/or turned a blind eye to the
use of illegal spying on citizens, illegal detentions at Guantanamo and
elsewhere, kidnappings and "extraordinary renditions" to countries
which the State Department has classified as the most egregious of
human rights violators and, worst of all, administration-sanctioned
acts of torture.
It is these activities that, to adopt the
words of a fellow former Assistant United States Attorney and lifelong
Republican, "turn my stomach." Given that, under the stewardship of
John Ashcroft and then Alberto Gonzales, the Department of Justice has
consistently engaged in heinous criminal activity and blatant
civil-rights violations around the world, I was finding it difficult to
be as exorcised as some about the firing of the U.S. Attorneys.
Certainly, there is abundant evidence that as many as seven U.S.
Attorneys were removed for no other reason than to enable the
administration to fill their positions with up-and-coming Republicans
or, worse, to interfere with or influence the investigation of one or
more cases for partisan political reasons -- a purpose that even
Sampson acknowledged would be improper. But that didn't get to me. Nor
was I particularly incensed by the fact that, as former U.S. Attorney
Bud Cummins of Little Rock, Arkansas commented on CBS's Face the
Nation, the authority to make presidential appointments may possibly
have been "delegated down through Harriet Miers, Karl Rove, Judge
Gonzales and all the way down to a bunch of 35-year-old-kids who -- who
got in a room together and tried to decide who was the most loyal to
the president." That story seemed to me to be less an accurate
description of what happened than a blame-it-on-the-kids alibi offered
on behalf of Bush, Rove, Miers, and Gonzales.
Listening to
Sampson, however, and reading the careless, often juvenile emails he
exchanged with fellow loyal Bushies, 33-year-old Monica Goodling
(Gonzales' top aide, now on administrative leave because she pleaded
the Fifth Amendment to avoid testifying before Congress) and Scott
Jennings (another thirty-something aide to Karl Rove in the Office of
Political Affairs), I felt my stomach beginning to roil again. In the
end, what really got me was the realization that none of these
Republican-politicians-in-training had any concept of public service.
Worse, they were entirely contemptuous of the very government they had
been entrusted to run.
I spent my entire career in federal
service, starting with a stint as a clerk for a federal judge. Modest
and self-effacing as he was, just like every other judge I've ever
known, he had a fondness for dispensing homely wisdom to his clerks.
One of his favorites -- "When in doubt, do right" -- always made me
laugh. It was, for starters, ridiculously corny. I thought, what a
no-brainer -- except in those agonizing situations where competing
moral or ethical concerns caused uncertainty about what course of
action to follow. If you knew what was right, of course you would do
it.
It never occurred to me that anyone would behave
otherwise, but then again, I was young -- and I hadn't been around Karl
Rove. On the other hand, the judge, a Republican, had been around his
share of rogues. Indeed, he had survived an administration that was
remarkably similar to the one we have today. Years before I clerked for
him, he had been appointed United States Attorney by President Richard
Nixon. As his first official act, the judge had selected a trusted
colleague to be his First Assistant and they both went about their
business.
One day not long afterwards, however, the judge
returned from lunch to find a member of Nixon's legal staff waiting for
him: The man had traveled from Washington, D.C to tell him that he had
to fire his First Assistant because he was a Democrat. What did the
judge do? He told the lawyer to get out of his office -- politely, I
would imagine -- and not come back. That was the end of the matter.
As
it happens, the judge's homely advice to his clerks is almost exactly
the title of the Department of Justice Ethics Rules provided to every
new employee. They inform the ethics training that DOJ employees around
the country receive once a year. The standards of conduct issued by
Alberto Gonzales' own shop are called "Do it Right" and here is the
introductory paragraph:
"You may have heard it said that
‘public service is a public trust.' This means that each Federal
employee has a responsibility to the United States Government and its
citizens to place loyalty to the Constitution, laws and ethical
principles above private gain. The public deserves and should expect no
less."
Tragically, the public has been receiving so much less
from the entire Bush administration. What would have happened to a
Bush-appointed U.S. Attorney who engaged in the sort of brazen display
of integrity I just described? We now know exactly what. Main Justice,
as the DOJ's Washington, D. C. office is called, is well-staffed with
"loyal Bushies" who will apparently carry out any tasks assigned,
regardless of how unethical, illegal, or immoral they may be. The
President is now trying to staff the U.S. Attorney's Offices throughout
the country with the same feckless loyalists. If he is allowed to
proceed unimpeded, those offices too will be run by United States
Attorneys "Doin' the Karl Rove Dance."
Elizabeth de la Vega is
a former federal prosecutor with more than 20 years of experience.
During her tenure, she was a member of the Organized Crime Strike Force
and Chief of the San Jose Branch of the U.S. Attorney's Office for the
Northern District of California. Her pieces have appeared in the Nation
Magazine, the Los Angeles Times, and Salon. She writes regularly for
Tomdispatch.com. She is the author of United States v. George W. Bush
et al., which has been optioned for a movie scheduled to begin
production in the summer of 2007. She may be contacted at
ElizabethdelaVega@Verizon.net.
Copyright 2007 Elizabeth de la Vega
[Republished at PFP with author permisssion]
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