Hi.  Sadly, I concur with the following analysis.  I listened to much of the
Ohio hearings via KPFA (not kpfk!) internet, and they were exactly that -
Ohio confined.  The first things out of almost every Democrat's mouth were
that nobody was contesting Bush's election and they were talking only
about Ohio.  And there it went from that diminished platform... the article
says it well and more completely than I could.  And yesterday morning,
Amy Goodman played excerpts from the Gonzales hearings and the same
spirit prevailed.  The Republicans played angry hardball in both arenas and
took the high ground.  No Jesse Jackson, William Fullbright or Joe Welsh
around and absolutely no breakthrough to the betrayal of our very society
which we all know happened and will likely happen again.  Read it and weep.
Ed
I've just read/added Cynthia McKinney's statement.  Would that she had set
the tone and elevation. Thanks to Tony Saidy and Pokey Anderson for it.

Sent: Friday, January 07, 2005 3:42 PM
Subject: Democrats roll over for Gonzales

Salon.com

 Not with a bang but a whimper
 As the protest against Bush's certification fell flat and they rolled over
 for Gonzales, it was a day of humiliation and futility for Democrats.

 - - - - - - - - - - - -
 By Tim Grieve

Jan. 7, 2005  |  WASHINGTON -- For an hour Thursday morning, Alberto
Gonzales played a lawyerly game of Slip 'n' Slide with members of the
Senate Judiciary Committee. That 2002 memo in which he called portions
of the Geneva Convention "quaint" and "obsolete"? Gonzales disavowed it.
His view of the president's powers during wartime? A "hypothetical" question
that Gonzales wouldn't answer. The legal opinion that seemed to authorize
torture by U.S. troops? Gonzales said he couldn't remember who asked for
it, then blamed the Department of Justice for the conclusions it reached.

Democratic Sen. Joe Biden sat quietly, listening to it all. On another day,
in another political reality, he might have been watching a presidential
nominee self-destruct. The man who would be attorney general was
coming off as evasive, as ill-prepared, as unwilling to accept
responsibility for anything that happened on his watch as George Bush's
White House counsel. But when Biden finally had his chance to put a
question to Gonzales, he delivered this clear message instead: "You're
going to be confirmed."

Thursday was the first serious work day for the 109th Congress, and it was
a day of humiliation and futility for the Democrats who still have jobs on
Capitol Hill. Republicans picked up four Senate seats and three House
seats in November, and signs of the Democrats' increasing powerlessness
were everywhere Thursday. In a hearing room in the Hart Senate Office
Building, Biden and his Democratic colleagues went through the motions of
questioning an attorney general nominee whose confirmation is a foregone
conclusion. On the floor of the House of Representatives, a handful of
Democrats launched a meaningless protest against the certification of
Bush's reelection.

For Democrats, the election protest was at least a momentary triumph. Four
years ago, with Al Gore presiding, Congress met in joint session to certify
the results of the 2000 election. One after another, African-American
members of the House rose to protest the vote from Florida, where thousands
of black voters had been disenfranchised and the U.S. Supreme Court had
called off the recount. Again and again, the members were gaveled down
because they couldn't get a single senator to join them in protesting the
election results.

It was different this time. When Ohio Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones rose in
the House chambers, she announced that she had a protest to lodge
against the Ohio vote, in writing as required. "And," she said, "I do have a
senator." The senator was California's Barbara Boxer, who said she joined
in the protest because it was the only way to shed light on the voting
irregularities in Ohio and the need for election reform nationwide.

Sen. Ted Kennedy praised Boxer for forcing the issue, saying that to treat
the vote certification as a "meaningless ritual would be an insult to our
democracy." But as noble as the Democrats' intentions might have been,
it was hard to see how the protest itself was anything other than a
"meaningless ritual."

The protest put a hold on the vote certification so that each house could
retire to its respective chamber for debate and a vote on the issue. But
Boxer -- or anyone else who thought the protest would lead to serious
discussion of election reform -- must have been disappointed by the sorry
spectacle that followed. There was no sense of history being made, no
sense that anything was really happening at all. Although a few hundred
people protested in the drizzle across the street from the Capitol, the
visitor
galleries in the Senate were mostly empty. Fewer than a dozen senators
showed up for the debate, and only the ones who spoke -- among them,
Hillary Rodham Clinton and, in his first floor speech, Barack Obama --
seemed to take it seriously. As Illinois Sen. Richard Durbin made an
impassioned plea for a bipartisan effort to improve the electoral system,
Dick Cheney and Sen. Rick Santorum sat slumped in a couple of chairs
on the edge of the Senate floor, talking and laughing. They weren't
listening.  With solid majorities in both houses, they didn't have to.

And the Republicans weren't the only ones who seemed to give the protest
short shrift. Minnesota Sen. Mark Dayton, a Democrat, took to the floor to
criticize Boxer for facilitating the protest, saying she would undermine
the country's confidence in its democracy if the protest were to succeed
and the election were thrown to the House of Representatives. And while
Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid ultimately spoke of the need for
election reform, he spent much of the protest debate on the other side of
the aisle, kibitzing with Santorum and a few other Republican senators.

When it came time for the roll call, Boxer was the only senator to vote for
the protest; John Kerry, who had announced Wednesday that he wouldn't
take part in any protest, conveniently found himself on a mission to
Baghdad.  In the House, 31 Democrats voted to support the objection.
Eighty-eight House Democrats voted against it, and 80 of them didn't
bother to vote at all.

For their efforts, Rep. John Conyers and the others who pursued an
investigation in Ohio got neither a serious debate over the voting
irregularities nor a commitment from Republicans even to think about
electoral reform.

The Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee were every bit as
ineffective in securing commitments from Alberto Gonzales. New York
Sen. Chuck Schumer asked Gonzales whether he would agree to urge
Bush to consult with Democrats about potential Supreme Court nominees.
Gonzales' response? He said he'd relay the request.

Gonzales' exchange with Schumer was one of several in which the
nominee was either unable to or uninterested in engaging with the questions
before him.  Schumer praised Gonzales for working with him on judicial
appointments, saying that because of their cooperation, Bush had
appointed federal judges for New York who were conservative but not outside
the mainstream. When Schumer asked why the administration hadn't been
able to work cooperatively on nominations with Democrats elsewhere in the
country, Gonzales said he'd wondered about that, too, then left it at that.

And time and again, when senators suggested that there might be some
linkage between Gonzales' legal work and the abuses at Abu Ghraib,
Gonzales seemed unable to understand why anyone might think there could
be a connection. When asked whether he agreed with the narrow definition
of "torture" set forth in a legal opinion he requested from the Department
of
Justice's Office of Legal Counsel, Gonzales said that by asking for the
opinion to be written, "I did my job as counsel to the president." Pressed
further by Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy, Gonzales said that he didn't recall
whether he agreed with the narrow definition at the time the opinion was
presented to him, and that "ultimately, it was the responsibility of the
Department of Justice" to interpret the law.

Other times, Gonzales seemed to be unprepared for questions he should
have known were coming. When asked about memos he wrote to help Bush,
then governor of Texas, weigh clemency requests from death row inmates,
Gonzales was vague about why he had left out information that could have
given Bush reason to think that death sentences should be commuted or at
least delayed. Asked about a now legendary case in which the condemned
man's lawyer slept through much of his trial -- a fact Gonzales didn't see
fit
to mention in his clemency memo -- the nominee said he couldn't remember
any of the details of the case. And when Sen. Lindsey Graham asked him
whether he agreed with a military lawyer's suggestion that White House
policy on torture and the Geneva Convention put U.S. troops at risk, the
nominee was caught completely flat-footed. He asked if the clock hadn't
run out on Graham's questioning. He asked Graham to repeat the question.
And then, when he still had nothing to say, he accepted Graham's offer to
take some time to think about it and provide a response later.

Gonzales offered a few assurances here and there. He said he understands
that he'll have an obligation to justice, and not just to the president,
when he's serving as attorney general. He said he disapproves of torture,
and that he is committed to following the rule of law. But without details
--and Gonzales wasn't providing any-- Democrats know that those promises
don't mean much. If you don't say how you'd define torture -- and Gonzales
didn't -- then it's easy to say that you oppose it, just as it's easy to
say you'll follow the rule of law so long as you don't say what you think
the law is.

None of this sat well with the Democrats on the committee, but they know
there's nothing they can do about it. It takes a simple majority to confirm

a cabinet appointee. The Republicans can provide that on their own, and
some Democrats -- including Colorado Sen. Ken Salazar, who introduced
Gonzales at the meeting -- are likely to cross over and join them.

So even if there's a direct line between Gonzales' legal work and the
abuses of Abu Ghraib -- abuses so awful that Sen. Orrin Hatch suggested
that photographs of them not be shown while Gonzales' children were in the
hearing room -- the Democrats are just going to have to take it. The
process wasn't pretty. Some Democrats pushed Gonzales hard for answers.
Leahy pursued him aggressively on a number of issues, including his
vetting, such as it was, of Bernard Kerik. Kennedy came at him again and
again on torture and the Geneva Convention. And Graham, a Republican,
questioned Gonzales sharply even though he said he intended to vote to
confirm him.

But even the most aggressive questioners were left looking a little
pathetic. At one point Thursday afternoon, Ted Kennedy was reduced to
begging Judiciary Committee chairman Arlen Specter for all of 15 minutes
to question Gonzales about issues like immigration and civil rights.

And after assuring Gonzales that his confirmation was in the bag, Joe
Biden found himself groveling before the nominee, calling him the "real
deal" - remember when they said that about John Kerry? -- even as he
pleaded with him to tell the truth about something. "We're looking for
candor
old buddy," Biden told Gonzales Thursday morning. "We're looking for you,
when we ask you a question, to give us an answer, which you haven't done
yet. I love you, but you're not being very candid so far."


***

Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney
Floor Statement
January 6, 2005

Mr. Speaker:

Never have the issues been so clear as they are for all of us
today.  Our country is at war, ostensibly to bring democracy to a
far off country on the other side of the planet; at the same
time, a significant chunk of the American people protest in their
own humble ways, for democracy at home.

They see:

Unequal protection of the precious right to vote, blantant in
Ohio, but not only in Ohio;

Voting machines that can't be trusted - casting votes for
candidates not intended by the voter - that happened in my own
race in my own State of Georgia;

Provisional balloting made absurd by seemingly purposefully
drafted arcane rules that in some cases rendered the right to
vote moot;

Our democracy entrusted to privately owned software run on
computers that can be hacked, that overheat, break down, or have
their batteries die in the middle of the voting process;

And moreover, voting on machines that don't even tell us after
we've voted, who it is, exactly, that our vote was counted for!

When Congress passed the Help America Vote Act, it hoped to
correct the blatant irregularities and purposeful
disenfranchisement that occurred in Florida in the 2000 election.

It is clear from the work of the Judiciary Committee,
Congresswoman Stephanie Tubbs-Jones, and the tireless efforts of
people across Ohio and our country, that this Congress has a lot
of work to do if we are to move beyond what is clear we have
today - faith-based voting.

Our Vice-President has told us to expect war for the next
generation.  Over 1,000 Americans and countless Iraqis have died
trying to take democracy abroad.  It is not only our
responsibility, but our right to demand, full democracy at home.
We do that by our actions today.

And we will continue to fight for an America that guarantees the
right to vote and the right to have that vote counted.

This is not merely about bitterness or a recount.  This is about
a blackout.

It is time to end the blackout and shine the lights on our
precious right to vote.

Thank you, Mr. Speaker, and I yield one minute to the Gentleman
from Missouri -- Representative Clay.









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