Lithwick: Gonzales Testimony About "Unitary Executive"

Writing on yesterday's testimony by Attorney General Gonzales, which has been described as less-than-impressive by officials on both sides of the aisle, Dahlia Lithwick suggests that the Attorney General may have intentionally taken a dive to emphasize the Administration's contempt for the Congress:
This record reflects either a Harvard-trained lawyer—and former state Supreme Court judge—with absolutely no command of the facts or the law, or it reveals a proponent of the unitary executive theory with absolutely nothing to prove. Gonzales' failure to even mount a defense; his posture of barely tolerating congressional inquiries; his refusal to concede that he owed the Senate any explanation or any evidence; his refusal to even accept that he bore some burden of proof—all of it tots up to a masterful display of the perfect contempt felt by the Bush executive branch for this Congress and its pretensions of oversight. In the plainest sense, Gonzales elevated the Bush legal doctrine of "Because I said so" into a public spectacle.

Viewed in that light, Gonzales did exactly what he needed to do yesterday. He took a high, inside pitch to the head for the team (nobody wants to look like a dolt on national television) but hit a massive home run for the notion that at the end of the day, congressional oversight over the executive branch is little more than empty theatre.

Written By:Mithras On April 20, 2007 7:18 PM

So, in this view, through Gonzales Bush was effectively saying to Congress, "You think I should fire my Attorney General? Make me." Knowing, of course, that Congress can remove the Attorney General - through impeachment, which would be abundantly fair in this instance, but equally impossible politically.

Having said that, I don't think it was Bush's or Gonzales's default position. If Gonzales could have gone before the Senate and provided a rational, reasonable explanation for the firings, he would have. But he couldn't. So they fell back on this.

Written By:Sam Thornton On April 21, 2007 1:45 PM

I agree with MITHRAS. If you look at the current high-profile miscreants under fire, each has adopted the position that they will continue to do exactly what they want to do until the cell door is actually locked.

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