

The Impossible Will Take a Little While
Soul of a Citizen
Lectures
Buy Loeb's Books
Pass the Word
Receive Loeb's Articles by email
About Paul Loeb
· Paul Loeb's Other Books
· Paul Loeb Bio
· Paul Loeb's Web Links
|
From The Huffington Post
The Enemy of Our Enemy May
Still Be the Enemy of Democracy
By Paul Rogat Loeb
As right-wing religious leaders attack Alberto Gonzales for being
insufficiently doctrinaire, it's tempting to accept him as the best we can
get for the Supreme Court. In a recent
HuffingtonPost blog, Rob McKay suggested we
mute our opposition voices precisely
because a Gonzales nomination would divide the political right and fracture
their coalition.
But accepting someone with the track record and values of Gonzales would be
a grievous mistake. We're in our current
mess in large part because our culture has been unable to confront the
profoundly destructive consequences of the choices made by
our leaders. To equivocate about Gonzales's
role in these choices is to accept a culture of lies.
Of course, we don't completely control
the outcome in this fight. It depends on the Democrats showing enough spine
and the half-dozen supposedly moderate Republicans placing democracy ahead
of short-term partisan advantage, and refusing to eliminate the judicial
filibuster. But when someone exhibits as much contempt for due process as
Gonzales does, we have to challenge him, in every way we can.
Gonzales is not David Souter, a relative unknown. He's someone who's
embraced the most radical extensions of presidential power and most radical
contempt for human rights. He called the Geneva Conventions "quaint" and
"obsolete." He chaired the 2002
meetings that that argued that
interrogations were not torture unless they produced "injury such as death,
organ failure, or serious impairment of body functions." He wrote the
Presidential Order saying that terror suspects could be tried and sentenced
to death by secret military tribunals.
Gonzales has also been consistently promoted
questionable corporate interests. While on
the Texas Supreme Court, he accepted major donations from corporations, like
Halliburton, with cases before the court
(Halliburton had five separate cases).
Then he consistently supported the positions of these companies while
refusing to recuse himself. He similarly refused to recuse himself from the
Bush administration's investigation of the Enron scandal, though he'd
received $14,000 from the company of "Kenny Boy." When the Government
Accountability Office asked who participated in Dick Cheney's secret energy
policy meetings, Gonzales blocked release of the documents.
Maybe a Gonzales nomination would temporarily split the right. But he
isn't someone to embrace, either morally or
politically. And if we let his potential nomination go through without a
fight, Bush can still heal the wounds in
his coalition by nominating a “real”
conservative to William Rehnquist's
seat. Meanwhile we'll have raised the bar still further till we're unable to
challenge anyone short of Attila the Hun or
Vlad the Impaler, and then only if they've
spoken too bluntly.
We may not win in challenging Gonzales, but at least we will make
clear why giving him a lifetime appointment is
an outrage to democracy. We can highlight
the profound destructiveness of the values that
he and this administration represent. We can challenge the Republican
“moderates”
to stay true to their word and maintain the option of the judicial
filibuster.
If we do this successfully, we'll help define Bush's Republicans not just as
captives to some vague notion of extremism, but to specific policies that
assault our democracy, endanger the lives of its citizens, and plunder the
planet that we inhabit. If swing Republicans still vote to eliminate the
filibuster, or insist on the confirmation of Gonzales, we can and should
hang this action around their necks, and brand them, come election time, not
only for embracing legal torture and unalloyed giveaways to corporate
interests, but also for annihilating 200 years of democratic checks and
balances in the service of a raw power grab.
Those on the political right have split and reunited
too often for us to count on
their rupture
over even something as consequential
as a Supreme Court nomination. When
election time comes, they'll cut their
losses and work together to elect those who will give them the maximum
power. Learning from this means not
giving up on challenging reprehensible nominees before we start.
Paul Rogat Loeb is the author of The Impossible Will Take a Little While: A
Citizen's Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear, winner of the Nautilus Award for
best social change book of last year. He's also the author of Soul of a
Citizen: Living With Conviction in a Cynical Time and three other books.
See
http://www.theimpossible.org for more on Paul's work.
|
|