Travelgate vs. Prosecutor-gate: A Comparison
Let's compare two scandals. One that is currently unfolding and one that played itself out during the early part of the Clinton administration.
TRAVELGATE
The Underlying Event: In 1993, shortly after taking office, the Clinton administration fired seven employees of the White House travel office. They were low-level employees who served at the pleasure of the president and had been replaced by previous administrations. In fact, as Joe Conason explained in his definitive article on this "scandal," there was quite a bit of evidence that the fired members of the travel office had been embezzling money and otherwise abusing their authority. The FBI investigated and charges were filed against some of the former employees. As for the Clintons, Ken Starr investigated the incident and found no evidence of wrongdoing.
The Response from the Right: Republicans were outraged by the firings and accused the Clintons of abusing their power in an effort to install their own cronies in the travel office. Their outrage was not in any way assuaged by the fact that these employees 1) served at the pleasure of the president, 2) had no reasonable expectation that they would keep their jobs when the administration changed hands, or 3) appeared to be guilty of numerous improper accounting practices, faulty record keeping, and embezzlement. When the FBI launched its investigation of the travel office staff, the Clintons were accused of using the Justice Department to exact political retribution. "Travelgate," as it came to be known, spawned a three-year long Congressional investigation and numerous front-page headlines.
PROSECUTOR-GATE
The Underlying Event: In late 2006, the Bush administration fired eight United States Attorneys for what increasingly looks like partisan political reasons and replaced at least some of them with hand-picked cronies. Unlike the staff at the White House travel office, U.S. Attorneys are high-level officials who must be confirmed by the Senate and who are vested with an enormous amount of power. Unlike the travel office staff, these U.S. Attorneys were not holdovers from a previous administration and therefore had every reason to expect that their employment would continue. Unlike the travel office staff, no one is even suggesting that any of the fired U.S. Attorneys did anything wrong, much less criminal. Unlike the travel office staff, there is mounting evidence that the fired U.S. Attorneys ran afoul of the White House solely because of decisions they made which had political ramifications (decisions regarding whom to investigate and prosecute). And, last but not least, high-ranking Bush administration officials appear to be guilty of affirmatively misleading Congress about the nature of these firings, something the Clinton administration did not do.
The Response from the Right: Quite unlike Travelgate, the near universal response from the Right has been to point out that U.S. Attorneys serve at the pleasure of the president and therefore there is no scandal here.
Events like this really help to underscore just how silly the so-called "scandals" of the Clinton era were. Given their "nothing to see here" reaction to the firing of eight U.S. Attorneys under highly suspicious circumstances, it's almost comically absurd to look back at how these same people reacted when seven low-level staffers in the travel office were fired (oh how scandalous!).
TRAVELGATE
The Underlying Event: In 1993, shortly after taking office, the Clinton administration fired seven employees of the White House travel office. They were low-level employees who served at the pleasure of the president and had been replaced by previous administrations. In fact, as Joe Conason explained in his definitive article on this "scandal," there was quite a bit of evidence that the fired members of the travel office had been embezzling money and otherwise abusing their authority. The FBI investigated and charges were filed against some of the former employees. As for the Clintons, Ken Starr investigated the incident and found no evidence of wrongdoing.
The Response from the Right: Republicans were outraged by the firings and accused the Clintons of abusing their power in an effort to install their own cronies in the travel office. Their outrage was not in any way assuaged by the fact that these employees 1) served at the pleasure of the president, 2) had no reasonable expectation that they would keep their jobs when the administration changed hands, or 3) appeared to be guilty of numerous improper accounting practices, faulty record keeping, and embezzlement. When the FBI launched its investigation of the travel office staff, the Clintons were accused of using the Justice Department to exact political retribution. "Travelgate," as it came to be known, spawned a three-year long Congressional investigation and numerous front-page headlines.
PROSECUTOR-GATE
The Underlying Event: In late 2006, the Bush administration fired eight United States Attorneys for what increasingly looks like partisan political reasons and replaced at least some of them with hand-picked cronies. Unlike the staff at the White House travel office, U.S. Attorneys are high-level officials who must be confirmed by the Senate and who are vested with an enormous amount of power. Unlike the travel office staff, these U.S. Attorneys were not holdovers from a previous administration and therefore had every reason to expect that their employment would continue. Unlike the travel office staff, no one is even suggesting that any of the fired U.S. Attorneys did anything wrong, much less criminal. Unlike the travel office staff, there is mounting evidence that the fired U.S. Attorneys ran afoul of the White House solely because of decisions they made which had political ramifications (decisions regarding whom to investigate and prosecute). And, last but not least, high-ranking Bush administration officials appear to be guilty of affirmatively misleading Congress about the nature of these firings, something the Clinton administration did not do.
The Response from the Right: Quite unlike Travelgate, the near universal response from the Right has been to point out that U.S. Attorneys serve at the pleasure of the president and therefore there is no scandal here.
Events like this really help to underscore just how silly the so-called "scandals" of the Clinton era were. Given their "nothing to see here" reaction to the firing of eight U.S. Attorneys under highly suspicious circumstances, it's almost comically absurd to look back at how these same people reacted when seven low-level staffers in the travel office were fired (oh how scandalous!).



2 Comments:
Lovely! About time we started to set the record straight about all the RightWing outrage.
Great post. You need to update it.
For example, when Clinton invoked executive privilege and refused to hand over documents, old William Clinger's committee then voted to push for contempt of Congress charges against White House Counsel Jack Quinn and two former White House aides.
Hello Harriet and Karl! We can just dredge up Clinger's motion and switch out the names!
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