Friday, May 18, 2007

Why Kmiec is wrong

Might as well get the response posted, because I'm sure the original op-ed is going to gleefully show up here soon...

2. Kmiec then attacks Senator Specter for suggesting that the hospital incident has an air of the Saturday Night Massacre about it -- "the comparison to Watergate is wholly inapt," writes Kmiec, because "Watergate involved a real crime."

Well, this case involves a "real crime," too -- systematic violations of a very important federal statute designed to protect Americans from wiretapping by their government, 18 U.S.C. 1809. But that's not really the central point for these purposes, because Specter's obvious reference was simply to the remarkable parallel in that the President and his closest aides had so egregiously departed from institutional legal norms that the entire top echelon of the Justice Department was prepared to resign in a manner that would signal to the public that something was greviously awry within the Administration. Attorney General Richardson and DAG Ruckelshaus did not resign in October 1973 because they concluded there had been a "burglary for purposes of political dirty tricks," in Kmiec's words. The burglary was an old story. They resigned because the President insisted that they fire prosecutor Archibald Cox when Cox subpoened Nixon's tapes. In other words, Nixon was trying to subvert the established procedures of the Justice Department. As were Bush and Gonzales.

2 comments:

Gonzo said...

That's a damn interesting analysis. Makes me think this requires further research for me.

Whenever these legal issues get all tangled up, I look to legal, non-partisan websites like Volokh to put a spin on it. It just gets too complicated for a non-lawyer to form an informed opinion.

Garrett said...

That's one strategy, of course...

If politics is too important to be left to the politicians, law is too important to be left to the lawyers. :-)