Nixon Rides Again

Friday, May 18th, 2007 by RLR

From Slate
By Dahlia Lithwick

bushnixIt took a day, but the newspapers finally caught up to the bloggers this morning in recognizing the real shocker in former Deputy Attorney General James Comey’s dramatic congressional testimony Tuesday. It’s not just the Grim Reaper tale of Alberto Gonzales and Andy Card double-teaming a critically ill John Ashcroft in his hospital bed. The real issue, as Orin Kerr, Glenn Greenwald, Marty Lederman, The Anonymous Liberal, and Paul Kiel started explaining Wednesday, is much bigger: The story isn’t who picked on a sick guy or even who did or didn’t break laws. The story is who gets to decide what’s legal. And the president’s now-familiar claim, a la Richard Nixon, is that it’s never illegal when he does it.

We now know that in 2004 Gonzales and Andy Card raced to the hospital to try to get a very sick John Ashcroft to certify the legality of the president’s secret NSA surveillance program–going over the head of Comey, the acting attorney general while Ashcroft was ill. When Ashcroft refused to override Comey, the White House reauthorized the program without DoJ certification. The question now is whether in so doing, the White House did something illegal, improper, neither, or both.

The Wall Street Journal today dismisses this story as a “full length docudrama.” Quoting selectively from Arlen Specter’s long colloquy with Comey, in which Comey conceded that “the Justice Department’s certification … was not [required] as far as I know,” the Journal concludes that “nothing illegal was done, [Comey] was never threatened by White House officials, and the President told him to do what he felt was right.” No laws broken. Nothing to see here, America. Move along.

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