15 May 2013 –
The President is in
political trouble. There even are mumblings
of impeachment. If he does not resolve
today’s big three scandals with aggressive action, the House of Representatives
may indeed start impeachments proceedings by next year. There are two views of the effectiveness of impeachment. Pragmatists say that the House would
accomplish little by impeaching the President for his involvement in the current
scandals; the Senate would never convict him.
Altruists contend that impeachment without the conviction still would be
valuable because it would force the President to confront his bad acts. Later generations, altruists say, will need
these facts to accurately assess history.
I remember President
Nixon in 1973-74. The House of
Representatives was drawing up articles of impeachment based on the President’s
misuse of the IRS to attack his political enemies and on his complicity in the
bungled break-in of Democrat Party offices in the Watergate Apartments. Why did Nixon, a renown political survivor, resign
instead of fight through the process? It
wasn’t simply because he was guilty. It
was because Republican leaders finally said that they would not support him in
the House’s impending impeachment and, importantly, in the Senate’s trial to
convict. Nixon knew his political life
was over. Initiating impeachment
proceedings forced President Nixon to resign because his party supported what
was right.
The House, on the other
hand, impeached President Clinton on 19 December 1998, on two charges:
perjury—lying under oath while being questioned by federal agents about his
sexual relations with White House aide, Monica Lewinsky—and obstruction of
justice. President Clinton survived the
trial in the Senate, even with fifty of fifty-five Republicans in the Senate
voting for conviction, because NO Democrat voted for his conviction. President Clinton’s Democrat confederates
stolidly held that his acts did not “rise to the level of impeachable
offenses.” President Clinton lost his
law license in his home state of Arkansas, but not his key to the Oval
Office.
Steady party support for
a beleaguered president is required in our era of divided government. If the President has it, he survives the
impeachment process. If he doesn’t, he
is gone. In President Obama’s case,
Democrat Party support is holding firm. But,
as in President Nixon’s case, that support can erode during the long hot
summer.
The President faces
three scandals of political importance: the Benghazi cover-up; the IRS’s
deliberate intimidation of conservative political groups; and, the Justice
Department’s flagrant abuse of the Associated Press’s First Amendment’s
rights. I start with the last one.
The President could make
this Justice Department scandal meaningless to all Democrats and a temporary
success to some Republicans. He could
tell Attorney General Eric Holder to resign and then to appoint a conservative
Democrat or a moderate-to-liberal Republican to “refocus” the Justice
Department. Then, no matter what came of
the investigations, scrupulously reported on by the vengeful press, there
probably would be little pressure to implicate the President in any illegal
decision-making. Political case closed.
President Obama has a
bigger problem with the misdirection of the IRS’s power. This worries Democrat politicians because the
IRS scares the average Democrat voter more than any other function in
government. Democrat politicians could lose
significant support in future elections by not treating this scandal as
something that “rises to the level” of a serious offense. The President could still resolve this
scandal. He could direct the IRS
commissioner, Steven Miller, to apologize publically for the abuse and to immediately
“refocus” the agency. The President could
then assure the American people that IRS rules will be followed scrupulously
for all Americans. Democrat politicians would
thus be appeased, and life would go on.
“Benghazi” is a serious
threat to President Obama’s tenure because the President has little control over
what has become a determined investigative process. Eventually, the most despicable facts will be
brought to light about why Americans were killed on 11 September 2012. The worst will be when America finally knows the
real reason for the cover-up: The President wanted Ambassador Stevens in
Benghazi for something he wanted nobody to know about. To cover up this when things went awry, he
hung the Ambassador out to die and went to bed early. When that becomes known, no Democrat anywhere
will risk political suicide by voting against impeachment and conviction. This game will be long and painful. The pragmatists will disappear. The rest of us will feel little joy in the eventual
verdict.
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