
December 28th, 2006, 02:47 PM
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Executive Member
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Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 17,200
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Forget Bush: Impeach Cheney
An OTR Editorial
Forget the President: Impeach Cheney
EXCERPT -
There is, of course, no lack of charges to be brought against Dick Cheney, from outing a covert CIA agent for political purposes to manipulating intelligence about WMD programs in Iraq. On the other hand, Cheney has consciously arrogated to himself as vice president all of the protections inherent in presidential privilege. It is immaterial whether, constitutionally speaking, he can make this claim. As the Libby case shows, the mere assertion of privilege by anyone in the West Wing can effectively stymie an investigation, or at least drag it out for so long that its political effects are minimized. And all matters of privilege aside, Cheney and his associates have woven such a tangled skein around their activities (the energy commission, for instance) that any investigation into them will be so laboriously involved as to eventually confuse and bore the American electorate.
As the investigation of Spiro Agnew showed, however, American politicians, even cunning ones, are most vulnerable to charges of low crimes and misdemeanors. This is Cheney’s Achilles heel: His close association with Halliburton and the great financial gains he has made from it during his two terms in office can easily be shown to be criminal. Even a short congressional investigation can uncover damning documentary evidence proving that the vice president’s office was instrumental in awarding vast no-bid contracts to Halliburton in both Iraq and the Gulf Coast. Why Cheney benefits is equally easy to prove (and equally damning): The company’s stock has tripled in value since he took office. Cheney and his lawyers will attempt to cloud the issue, but charges of straightforward graft proffered on the floor of either the House or the Senate are likely to stick, at least politically, to a figure who is so widely reviled. (And charges can be brought in the Senate against Cheney in his capacity as a de facto member of that body—a simple majority is all that is required to do so.)
Impeaching and convicting Cheney on charges of graft would at the least force him out of the West Wing. All other eventualities—a presidential pardon chief among them—are secondary. Absent the protection of his office, Cheney cannot assert privilege in future civil suits brought against him; nor can he afford to ever leave the country, since any number of foreign powers would be likely to seize him and bring him to trial for war crimes or violations of human rights. And the Bush administration would be fatally contaminated—and so politically neutered for the next two years—by mere association.
Whatever else he might be is unimportant; the vice president is demonstrably a crook. With luck, his resignation or impeachment might lead to graver consequences for him, but at the very least it will ensure that future presidents choose their seconds in command more judiciously. A sure outcome is that no Republican in 2009 will be able to accuse Democrats of playing partisan football with Dick Cheney, because no one cares enough about the vice president to make that charge plausibly stick.
complete here - http://www.thousandreasons.org/get_a...article_id=351
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