What Obama Offered Blagojevich 

 


by Patrick J. Buchanan (more by this author)
Posted 12/12/2008 ET
Updated 12/12/2008 ET


"Something is rotten in the state," says Marcellus in "Hamlet." 

Well, it certainly is in the state of Illinois. 

Yet, on hearing U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald describe a plot by his
governor to sell his Senate seat -- "conduct (that) would make Lincoln roll
over in his grave" -- how did reform President Barack Obama respond? 

"I had no contact with the governor or his office, and so I was not aware of
what was happening. ... And as I said, it is a sad day for Illinois. Beyond
that, I don't think it's appropriate to comment." 

"A sad day for Illinois" -- that was it.

But FBI Special Agent in Charge Robert Grant could not contain his
revulsion: "If (Illinois) isn't the most corrupt state in the United States,
it's certainly one hell of a competitor. I think even the most cynical
agents in our office were shocked." 

Yet Barack stayed cool. Not for 24 hours did he join the clamor for Gov. Rod
Blagojevich to stand down. 

The stink of this is not going away, and it may adhere to the new presidency
that seemed about to begin in a new era of good feeling.

For, consider. While Obama said he had never spoken with the governor about
the Senate seat -- understandable, given how toxic the scandal-plagued
Blagojevich was -- he did not say his staff had not done so. 

Which raises several questions: 

Did Obama direct or ask any staffer to speak to Blagojevich? Did Rahm
Emanuel or David Axelrod, both of Chicago, never speak to the governor about
the Senate appointment? Did Barack's aides all treat Blagojevich as a
political leper and not communicate to him any interest in or concern about
whom he might appoint to succeed Obama? 

This defies credulity. 

On the other hand, if Obama's staffers did talk to Blagojevich or his staff,
did the governor or his men suggest a big-time pay-off might purchase a
Senate seat?

For Blagojevich is overheard on the wiretaps complaining that all that
Obama, whom he slurs nastily, was offering was gratitude. 

How did Blagojevich know that? 

Who told him Barack would not pony up and play ball? And if any Obama aide
was solicited for a bribe, did they relate that to Obama? Did they report it
to the FBI or the U.S. attorney's office? 

Forty-eight hours into Senategate and already the cancer has metastasized.
Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. has been dragged in. He is "Senate Candidate 5" on
the wiretaps. From the FBI transcripts, it appears a Jackson "emissary,"
with access to the governor, offered to raise half a million for
Blagojevich's re-election, in return for naming Jackson to the Senate. With
perhaps a million more to follow. 

Jackson says he met for 90 minutes with the governor Monday and made his
case for the Senate appointment -- on his record alone. Jackson emphasized
that he was not solicited by the governor for a bribe, nor was any emissary
ever authorized to offer the governor anything. 

Jackson's lawyer backs him up, but says that some supporter, without
Jackson's knowledge, might have freelanced on his own. 

There are other puzzling questions. 

Why, if Fitzgerald was listening to the wiretaps and laying his trap for the
governor and corrupt politicians interested in buying a U.S. Senate seat,
did he abort the operation with his 6 a.m. arrests of Blagojevich and his
chief of staff? Why spring the trap when the mouse is just outside, mulling
over whether to go for the cheese? 

Why not let the plot unfold? Why not let the corrupt bidder for a Senate
seat make a solid offer and bring in his or her down payment? Why not wait
for the felony to be committed instead of acting while it was still being
considered and discussed? 

This one is not going away soon. 

Forty-eight hours into the scandal, we have a governor and chief of staff
arrested in their homes for attempting to sell the U.S. Senate seat of the
44th president of the United States. And one of the most famous names in
politics, Jesse Jackson Jr., has hired a lawyer and been placed under a
cloud of suspicion that some benefactor tried to buy him the Senate seat he
coveted. 

No one is yet convicted of anything. But if this scandal touches any member
of Obama's White House staff, who may have spoken with Blagojevich and
listened to his solicitation of a bribe without reporting it, we are going
to have a new special prosecutor in Washington, D.C. 

Indeed, the U.S. Senate should probably make the confirmation of Eric Holder
as attorney general, the Clintonite who midwifed the pardons of Marc Rich
and the Puerto Rican terrorists, contingent on his naming an independent
counsel in the Senategate scandal. 

As for the Bush-to-Barack transition, which Americans have applauded as
graceful and uplifting, it is now mired in mud. 

Yes, indeed, it is -- a sad day for America. 

______________
Mr. Buchanan is a nationally syndicated columnist and author of Churchill,
Hitler, and "The Unnecessary War": How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West
Lost the World, "The Death of the West,", "The Great Betrayal," "A Republic,
Not an Empire" and "Where the Right Went Wrong." 

 

http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=29882&s=rcme

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