In an editorial (“Time for Facts, Not Resolutions”), the New York Times voices its opposition to Senator Feingold’s call for censuring President Bush:
We understand the frustration that led Senator Russell Feingold to introduce a measure that would censure President Bush for authorizing warrantless spying on Americans. It’s galling to watch from the outside as the Republicans and most Democrats refuse time and again to hold Mr. Bush accountable for the lawlessness and incompetence of his administration. Actually sitting among that cowardly crew must be maddening.
Still, the censure proposal is a bad idea. Members of Congress don’t need to take extraordinary measures like that now. They need to fulfill their sworn duty to investigate the executive branch’s misdeeds and failings. Talk about censure will only distract the public from the failure of their elected representatives to earn their paychecks.
[ . . . ] With so much still unknown about the domestic spying, the censure resolution merely allows the Republicans to change the subject to fairy tales about Democratic leaders’ trying to impeach Mr. Bush. They are also painting criticism of Mr. Bush as unpatriotic. That’s tedious nonsense, but watching Mr. Feingold’s Democratic colleagues run for cover shows how effective it is.
I can’t wait to see the reaction of Glenn Greenwald and others of his persuasion to the Times’ editorial. They will be livid and will accuse the “Newspaper of Record” of cowardice and selling out. Count on it.
In his op-ed in the Washington Post, E.J. Dionne takes note of the disparity between the reaction of Democratic senators and the reaction at the grass roots and Web roots to Feingold’s proposal:
- The senators: Senators mostly scampered away from the cameras earlier this week, because they didn’t want to say publicly what many of them said privately. Most were livid that Feingold sprang his censure idea on a Sunday talk show without giving them any notice. Many see Feingold as more concerned with rallying support from the Democratic base for his 2008 presidential candidacy than with helping his party regain control of Congress this fall. Some Democrats want the party to forget the issue of warrantless wiretapping, because engaging it would let Bush claim that he’s tougher on terrorists than his partisan enemies. Others share Feingold’s frustration with the administration’s stonewalling on the program, but they think they need to know more before they can effectively challenge Bush on the issue. Both groups were furious that Feingold grabbed headlines away from those delicious stories about Republican divisions and defections.
- The grass roots and web roots: Feingold has become a hero—again. They already loved him for his courage in opposing the USA Patriot Act and his call for a timetable for troop withdrawals from Iraq. Feingold’s latest move only reinforced his image of being “a Dem with a spine,” as the left-liberal Web site BuzzFlash.com put it in a comment representative of the acclaim he won across the activist blogs.
Let’s see. Here’s the likely tally so far: the NYT editors are cowards, crypto-Republicans (or, at least, not real Democrats). I’m collecting explanations. If you’ve got any more, add ‘em in the comments—I’ll update the post.
My own preferred explanation is Democratic party loyalty.
Has Feingold thought about how many states McGovern carried against Nixon in the 72 election and the McGovern like posturing of his efforts? I suspect the nation has moved further to the right since 1972. Nixon captured 520 electoral college votes. McGovern captured the popular vote in Mass. and the District of Columbia.
Your highly selective quotes from the NY Times Editorial leave a highly misleading wrong impression about the gist of the editorial. The Times is not in favor of the censure resolution, but the remainder of its editorial highlights the very reason why Senator Feingold and his supporters think that the resolution is, in fact, the right step at the right time:
“We’d be applauding Mr. Feingold if he’d proposed creating a bipartisan panel to determine whether the domestic spying operation that Mr. Bush has acknowledged violates the 1978 surveillance law, as it certainly seems to do. The Senate should also force the disclosure of any other spying Mr. Bush is conducting outside the law. (Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has strongly hinted that is happening.)
The Senate Intelligence and Judiciary Committees should do this, but we can’t expect a real effort from Senator Pat Roberts, the Intelligence Committee chairman, or Senator Arlen Specter, chairman of the Judiciary Committee. They’re too busy trying to give legal cover to the president’s trampling on the law and the Constitution.
When the Republicans try to block an investigation, as they surely will, Senator Harry Reid, the minority leader, should not be afraid to highlight that fact by shutting down the Senate’s public business, as he did last year. This time, though, Mr. Reid needs to follow up. The first time Mr. Reid forced the Senate into a closed session, Mr. Roberts said he would keep his promise about an investigation into the hyping of intelligence on Iraq. But Mr. Roberts continues to sit on that report.”
The problem is that the Republican-controlled Congress has refused and will continue to refuse to investigate the NSA matter, and so far, the majority of the Democrats have let them get away with it. The Times suggests that Senator Feingold should have tried instead to form a bipartisan panel to investigate, but that would be a truly pointless exercise. The Senate Intelligence Committee has refused to go forward with an investigation, it is likely that the Senate Judiciary Committee will do the same, and the House Intelligence Committee’s so-called “investigation” is a farce. What makes the Times think the Republicans would even consider going along with this “bipartisan panel” idea? The fact is, the way things stand, there will be no investigation, ever, Bush will be free to go on his merry, lawless way, and the Republicans will be free to continue to accuse anyone who dares to disagree with, let alone challenge, him of being seditious, Osama-loving, terrorist-enabling traitors who should, at the very least, be run out of town on a rail, if not shot. Thank God Russ Feingold, at least, has the backbone to stand up for what’s right.
I have been around for a number of years and, to my dismay, cannot ever remember a group of men and women, elected by the people and for the people, to so blatantly send our proud country into the abyss from hell from which our grandchildren will never recover.
Incumbants are bad for our country.
THESE POLITICIANS ARE A DISGRACE
AND MUST BE REPLACED
IF YOU APPROVE, WE MUST REMOVE!
Senator Feingold should be commended, he is doing what we elected him to do. It would be my pleasure to vote for Senator Feingold for President, if he decides that is what he wants to do.
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