Saturday, October 07, 2006

Impeachment Explained

This is the article that actually made me re-consider the prospect on impeachment, especially with its eyntymology of “High crimes and misdemeanors,” for the “strict constructionists.”

*ZNet | U.S.*

*Impeachment Anyone?*

*by David Swanson; TomDispatch ; October

06, 2006*

[/This piece is based on seven new books on impeachment, all

briefly discussed in a final note./]

Never before has the system of government established by the

U.S. Constitution been as seriously threatened; never before has

the built-in remedy for the sort of threat we face been as badly

needed; never before have we had as good an opportunity to use

that remedy exactly as it was intended.

Congress has never impeached a President and removed him from

office. Once, with Richard M. Nixon, impeachment proceedings

forced a resignation. Twice, with Andrew Johnson and Bill

Clinton, impeachment proceedings led to acquittals. On a few

other occasions, Congressional efforts to advance articles of

impeachment have had legal and political results. These have

always benefited the political party that advanced impeachment.

This was even true in the case of the Republicans' unpopular

impeachment of Clinton, during which the Republicans lost far

fewer seats than the norm for a majority party at that point in

its tenure. Two years later, they lost seats in the Senate,

which had acquitted, but maintained their strength in the House,

with representatives who had led the impeachment charge winning

big. (This point -- little noted but important indeed -- was

made to me recently by John Nichols, author of the forthcoming

book, The Genius of Impeachment

.)

In every past case, impeachment efforts were driven by members

of Congress or other Washington political players, sometimes

with support from the media. The public got behind Nixon's

impeachment, but only after the proceedings had revealed massive

presidential crimes. The public never got behind Clinton's

impeachment, despite saturation news coverage and widespread

support among political power players. In the case of George W.

Bush's impeachment, with the media and both parties in Congress

opposed to it, public support is just about all there is -- so far.

In past cases, impeachment has either focused on trivial

offenses or on crimes that were serious but not tied to the

administration's major foreign policy decisions or to policies

in which Congress was complicit. Clinton was impeached for lying

under oath about his sex life -- clearly a crime but not

bribery, treason, or a "high crime or misdemeanor" (an old

British phrase meaning an abuse of the political system by a

high office holder), and so not actually an impeachable offense.

Nixon was nearly impeached

for obstruction of justice, warrantless spying, refusing to

produce information subpoenaed by Congress, lying to the public,

and other abuses of power, but not for his secret and illegal

bombing of Cambodia.

For all the reasons Nixon was nearly impeached, George W. Bush

could be impeached too. He has openly engaged in illegal,

unconstitutional, warrantless spying, and -- while Congress has

not yet used subpoenas -- Bush has obstructed its

investigations, refused to comply with Freedom of Information

Act requests, and broken a variety of laws in the course of

exacting retribution against whistleblowers, producing false

reports, and establishing a regime of secrecy of a sort that

Nixon could only dream about.

Bush has lied to the public about the warrantless spying program

at the National Security Agency (NSA), the war in Iraq, the

kinds of warnings he was given before hurricane Katrina arrived,

and numerous other issues. While Nixon made secret audio tapes

in the White House which, when discovered, doubled as evidence,

this time there is video -- of Bush being warned prior to

Katrina /and/ claiming he was not warned, of Bush assuring us he

was not engaged in warrantless spying /and/ brazenly asserting

that he will continue to spy without warrants, of Bush warning

us about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction as well as Saddam's

supposed ties to the 9/11 attacks /and/ of Bush claiming he did

no such thing, of Bush claiming the U.S. does not condone

torture /and/ of the torture victims.

Bush's administration has even bribed journalists and

manufactured phony news stories at home as well as in Iraq in

order to deceive the public. Congressman John Conyers has

introduced bills to censure both the President and Vice

President Cheney for their refusal to turn over information,

while Senator Russ Feingold has introduced a bill to censure

Bush for his illegal spying programs.

But charging Bush with such Nixonian offenses would only scrape

the surface of the criminal record that is motivating the

popular movement for impeachment -- and impeachment was always

meant to be a popular movement. The drafters of the Constitution

placed impeachment in the hands of the House of Representatives

because they considered that body -- with its members facing

reelection every two years -- closest to the people.

In theory, a democratic system with impeachment at its heart

creates an obvious conflict in the wake of any (honest and

credible) presidential election. How could the people's

representatives impeach, and ask the Senate to consider removing

from office, a president whom the people have just elected? In

practice at present, quite a different conflict takes center

stage: How can a Congress complicit in many of this President's

criminal acts be asked to impeach him? Perhaps by focusing on

crimes Congress was not complicit in, by allowing Congressional

representatives to plead ignorance or remorse, and by electing

new representatives better tuned to the present will of the people.

And how do we get the media to cover investigations of crimes

the media too have been complicit in? Same answer (minus, of

course, the elections).

Let's begin by considering the case for impeaching and removing

from office George W. Bush and Dick Cheney. Quite a few

organizations and individuals have, in fact, already drafted

articles of impeachment. Though no two lists

are the same, there is a great

deal of overlap. There are some crimes that appear on almost

every list and that seem to be driving the public demand for

accountability. Many of the best lists are in recently published

and forthcoming books. (See note at end of article.)

*Impeachment for What?*

Every list of impeachable offenses includes tangential

references to other impeachable offenses. The list seems

inexhaustible, but here's a quick run-down of the main possible

charges:

The illegal war in Iraq is at or near the top of everyone's

list. Sometimes, the emphasis is on the illegality

of an aggressive war;

sometimes, on the fraud

used to sell the

war to Congress and the public; sometimes, on the absence

of a proper Congressional declaration of war.

Lying to Congress is a felony. Lying to the public is an

impeachable offense -- and one brought against Nixon. Initiating

an aggressive war is the highest crime under treaties that are

part of international and U.S. law. Launching a war without

proper Congressional approval is a violation of the War Powers

Act of 1973. Misusing government funds to launch a war is a

separate crime, committed by Bush when he ordered troops moved

to Iraq and began bombing raids prior to Congress's dubious

authorization to use force.

On some lists are the various war crimes that have accompanied

the war, including the targeting of civilians, journalists,

hospitals, and ambulances, the use of antipersonnel weapons in

densely settled urban areas, and the use of illegal weapons,

including white phosphorous, depleted uranium, and a new version

of napalm used in Mark 77 firebombs.

High on most lists are also unlawful detentions and torture. The

arbitrary detention of Americans, of legal residents, and of

non-Americans without due process, without charge, and without

access to counsel is illegal under U.S. and international law,

and unconstitutional as well. In case anyone doubted this fact,

the Supreme Court recently ruled on it. The highest body in our

judicial branch of government has essentially declared Bush a

criminal, and yet Congress recently acted, through the Military

Commissions Act of 2006, to provide the President with

retroactive immunity for some of his acts in these areas.

Bush has authorized the torture of thousands of captives,

resulting in some cases in death, and sought to evade

responsibility by redefining acts commonly considered torture

out of the category of torture. He has agreed to let suspects be

kidnapped off the streets of cities in other countries, allowed

prisoners to be hidden from the International Committee of the

Red Cross, shipped people under U.S. control to third nations or

a network of secret U.S. prisons to be tortured. The

Constitution, international treaties that are part of U.S. law,

and other U.S. laws ban torture. When, in the McCain Amendment

to a Department of Defense bill last January, Congress

redundantly re-banned torture, the President signed the bill but

added a signing statement

explaining that he would not obey it.

On every impeachment list as well is the illegal National

Security Agency spying to which Bush has publicly (and proudly)

confessed, and which a federal court

has ruled criminal. Yet, to this day, it goes on unchecked. Bush

lied to the public and Congress about his illegal spying

programs for years. Congress has passed bills cutting off

funding for the programs, but Bush countermanded these with

signing statements.

The spying, done without recourse to the secret FISA court set

up in 1978 for exactly this purpose, is also in blatant

violation of the FISA Act of 1978, of the Fourth Amendment, and

-- according to Congressman John Conyers' report, /George W.

Bush versus the U.S. Constitution/ -- of the Stored

Communications Act of 1986 and the Communications Act of 1934.

Congressman Conyers also cites Bush for violating the National

Security Act and for failing to keep all members of the House

and Senate Intelligence Committees "fully and currently

informed" of intelligence activities, such as the warrantless

surveillance programs.

On nearly every list of impeachable offenses is the President's

failure to protect New Orleans from Hurricane Katrina. Over a

period of years, the administration undermined the city's

protection. In the days prior to the storm's arrival, Bush was

warned about just what might happen. Yet prior to the storm --

and for days after it hit -- he did nothing; the unqualified

cronies he had put in charge of the Federal Emergency Management

Agency did nothing; and the National Guard members from

Louisiana, Mississippi and other states of the southeast whom he

had dispatched to Iraq could not be called upon to help.

Thousands of Americans died preventable deaths and a city was

ruined, not so much by a storm as by the non-response to it.

Even now, people who lost their homes in the Katrina debacle are

being told there are no funds available to help them.

The Constitution requires that the President "take care that the

laws be faithfully executed." Former Congresswoman and Judiciary

Committee Member Elizabeth Holtzman in her new book, /The

Impeachment of George W. Bush/, argues that Bush's neglect of

New Orleans (and other presidential duties) violated this

responsibility and so constitute high crimes and misdemeanors.

Holtzman puts into this category as well the administration's

failure to provide U.S. troops in Iraq with proper body armor,

and the failure of the President and his top officials to plan

for the occupation of Iraq.

In their book, /The Case for Impeachment/, Dave Lindorff and

Barbara Olshansky make a similar argument about Bush's failure

to attempt to prevent the attacks of September 11, 2001 and his

obstruction of investigations into those crimes (as do Dennis

Loo and Peter Phillips in their book /Impeach the President/).

The same two books, along with the Bush Crimes Commission in its

"verdict," also suggest that, by denying the existence of,

enacting policies that increase, and failing to work to decrease

global warming, Bush has committed perhaps the most serious

offense possible -- in the words of Loo and Phillips, "placing

oil-industry profits over the long-term survival of the human

race and the viability of the planet."

The Bush Crimes Commission finds the President's imposition of

abstinence-only policies on countries being ravaged by AIDS to

be a serious crime against humanity. Loo and Phillips charge

Bush with "violating the constitutional principle of separation

of church and state through the interlinking of theocratic

ideologies in the decision-making process of the U.S. government."

Three of the recent books on impeachment include as an

impeachable offense Bush's use of signing statements to announce

his refusal to obey hundreds of laws

passed by Congress. The American Bar Association has found the

practice unconstitutional. It is, in fact, an open threat to the

rule of law.

An official censure by Congress would do nothing to compel the

President to obey laws he chooses not to obey. Impeachment would

do nothing. Only impeachment followed by removal from office

will cure this cancer on the American political system. The

current situation is exactly what the authors of the

Constitution had in mind when they made impeachment and removal

from office the means of protection against tyranny.

Holtzman includes in her roster of impeachable offenses the

selective and misleading leaking of classified information,

especially on supposed Iraqi weapons of mass destruction (which

Bush himself was directly involved in) to advance a dishonest

case for war. Lindorff and Olshansky also include the leaking of

CIA agent Valerie Plame's identity.

Conyers cites violations of the following related laws: 1)

Federal requirements concerning the leaking and misuse of

intelligence, including failing to enforce an executive order

that requires the disciplining of those who leak classified

information, whether intentionally or not; 2) Federal laws

forbidding retaliation against whistle-blowers of various sorts,

an example being the demotion of Bunnatine Greenhouse

, the chief

contracting officer at the Army Corps of Engineers, who exposed

secret, no-bid contracts awarded to Kellogg, Brown & Root, a

subsidiary of Halliburton; 3) Federal regulations and ethical

requirements governing conflicts of interest, including the

briefing of then-Attorney General John Ashcroft on an FBI

investigation of possible misconduct by Karl Rove, even though

Mr. Rove had previously received nearly $750,000 in fees for

political work on Mr. Ashcroft's campaigns.

Loo and Phillips -- rightly I think -- bring up a number of

offenses not found on most lists, including:

· "Usurping the American people's right to know the

truth about governmental actions through the systematic use of

propaganda and disinformation";

· "Overthrowing Haiti's democratically elected

president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, and installing a highly

repressive regime" in his place;

· Hiding government decisions from public and

congressional view "by a willful subversion of the Freedom of

Information Act."

I would add one item not yet found on anybody's list: the

passage by Congress of the Military Commissions Act of 2006 that

retroactively and unconstitutionally legalizes various Bush

administration acts involving torture and illegal detention, and

the passage of other bills doing the same on a number of the

crimes listed above. Impeachment is not a criminal process.

Legalizing impeachable offenses does not make them less

impeachable. But proposing and lobbying to legalize illegal

impeachable offenses are themselves additional impeachable

offenses.

*What Would It Take for Impeachment to Happen?*

Believe it or not, the impeachment of George W. Bush and Dick

Cheney is perfectly possible, although a number of factors will

have to come together for it to happen. The public will is

already there, and this is quite remarkable given the lack of

action in Congress or mention in the mainstream media. The

polling that has

been done on impeachment is dramatic. The Washington Post

finds that a third of the country wants Bush not just impeached

but also removed from office. Zogby finds

that, by a margin of 53%

to 42%, Americans want Congress to impeach President Bush /if he

lied about the war in Iraq/. When Americans were asked

, "What 2 or 3

specific changes would have to take place in order to improve

your trust in government today?" the winner by far was

"personnel changes/impeachment proceedings." When Pennsylvanians

were asked

whether they would be likely to vote for a congressional

candidate who "supports having impeachment proceedings against

President Bush," 84.9% of Democrats said yes, while 7.0% said

no. Among Independents, 49.3% said yes, while 40.6% said no.

The Republican National Committee got spooked this past summer

and felt obliged to announce that impeachment would be good for

Republicans in the coming elections. This claim is made without

a shred of evidence, either in history or in present polling.

Nothing excites non-Republicans today like impeachment, and

"Vote for us or we'll go to jail" is a lousy slogan. The

Democratic base is aching for Democrats in Congress to get some

spine and stand up to the criminals who are throwing away one of

the most brilliant creations of the eighteenth century: our

Constitution. Instead, Leader Nancy Pelosi has ordered Democrats

in Congress to stay away from impeachment -- though she did say

that they would hold hearings and see where they went... if the

Democrats win a majority in the House of Representatives.

To voters who are paying attention, the "let's hold

investigations and see where they go" approach looks

disingenuous, given how many impeachable offenses are already

public knowledge. I've heard reports from dozens of

Congressional representatives, in both parties, who refused to

sign onto Conyers' bill for an investigation, and not once has

anyone argued that there is too little evidence. The argument

always focuses on the "extreme" nature of impeachment or the

political agenda behind impeachment. As a result, the Democrats

are, for the most part, steering clear even of talk of future

investigations.

Quietly, however, Democrats do acknowledge that impeachment is

coming. Following the triumphal 1972 election of Richard Nixon,

had you raised the topic of impeachment, Democrats in Washington

would have dismissed it as impossible. Today, on the other hand,

they dismiss it as unacceptable -- at least pre-election. When

former director of the NSA, Lt. Gen. William Odom, suggested

impeaching Bush

last week at a forum on Iraq organized by progressive Democratic

Congress members, the ensuing silence and shuffling in seats

suggested a strong desire by our representatives to dive under

the table. They resisted that urge and changed the subject. They

did not, however, argue against impeachment.

A lot of activists imagine that there is a conflict between

working on impeachment and working on the upcoming elections.

They fail to see raising impeachment as one way to win those

elections. I would argue that holding a large rally for

impeachment, as we did in Charlotte, North Carolina last

Saturday, does more to help defeat Republicans than does funding

the campaigns of any number of milquetoast Democrats who will

use the money to run uninspiring ads that excite nobody. If

Democrats could stop worrying for a minute about energizing the

Republican base and converting Republicans, they might be able

to look at the potential impeachment has to excite and turn out

their own base. This is an off-year election. It will be won by

turnout -- and by fighting suppression, fraud, and theft. To the

extent that the elections are about something as significant as

impeachment, candidates and citizens will be more likely to

fight for stolen votes.

If the Democratic incumbents all stood for impeachment now, the

Democrats would win a majority in a landslide. In fact, they

might even persuade the necessary fifteen Republicans to join

them and impeach Bush and Cheney pre-election. Rep. Ron Paul has

spoken up for impeachment. Only fourteen more are needed, and

there is no law that says Republicans can't put their country

ahead of George W. Bush. That fact will become increasingly

important if the Democrats do not win a majority or do not fight

when their elections are stolen. For now, impeachment advocates

find themselves in the situation of trying to push the Democrats

to talk about impeachment for their own good.

After the election, come what may, citizen activists will find

themselves with time on their hands for at least a few months

until the next election cycle begins. During this window,

leading into the next Congress, the American public will either

force impeachment on Washington or allow the slide toward

fascism to continue. This moment in our history presents an

opportunity for the first time for a popular presidential

impeachment, an impeachment imposed on the government by the

people.

Impeachment and removal, followed later by indictment and

conviction, will be a long struggle. (It will, sadly, slow

Congress down for a while in its work of destroying the world.)

But it is needed to restore the U.S. Constitution as well as

international law, and to establish a standard of accountability

for the launching of aggressive wars. So, while the process may

need to begin with crimes that Congress has been less complicit

in, such as the use of signing statements, it must end with the

offenses our world cannot well survive if they are repeated.

The first subpoena sent to the White House will be refused, of

course, and the conflict will develop from that point. Democrats

and any Republicans of conscience should be prepared for that

and have a plan that will see us through to George Bush's

removal from office for the highest of high crimes and

misdemeanors.

*******

*Note on Bush and Books: The New Impeachment Literature*

/The fact that a sizeable collection of books exists on the

subject of impeaching George W. Bush is a phenomenon worthy of

comment in itself. Some of the offenses committed by Bush and

Cheney have been reported first -- and sometimes only -- in

books as was the case with James Risen's State of War: The

Secret History of the C.I.A. and the Bush Administration and

Philippe Sands' Lawless World: America and the Making and

Breaking of Global Rules. The books that follow, all exploring

where U.S. citizens must take that evidence, constitute a field

of reporting that has yet to make an appearance in a major

American newspaper or on a major American television network.

Books (and the internet) are now the first draft of history as

well as the last, since the other news media have abandoned the

field. Yet the analysis in these books is not only largely in

agreement but readily comprehensible by anyone with an

elementary school education, no less a reporter, and there is no

reason to imagine that the views expressed could not be

effectively expressed on television or in a newspaper. /

/If you know nothing about the impeachment movement, pick up at

least one of the following. They tend to be brief, easy to read,

and enormously important:/

· The Impeachment of George W. Bush: A Practical Guide

for Concerned Citizens

,

by Elizabeth Holtzman, former Congresswoman and member of the

Nixon impeachment panel, and Cynthia L. Cooper (Nation Books,

268 pages, $14.95), an excellent and readable book, lays out

five major grounds for the President's impeachment, and offers a

bonus section on Dick Cheney.

· Impeach the President: The Case Against Bush and

Cheney

,

edited by Dennis Loo and Peter Phillips, with an introduction by

Howard Zinn (Seven Stories Press, 208 pages, $17.95), is a

wonderfully well written collection of essays organized around a

list of 12 grounds for the impeachment of Bush and Cheney.

· The Case for Impeachment, the Legal Argument for

Removing President George W. Bush from Office

by Dave Lindorff and Barbara Olshansky (Thomas Dunne Books, 275

pages, $23.95), an amazingly popular and extremely readable

book, explains the context for impeachment proceedings, while

also setting forth six articles of impeachment against Bush,

plus an extra section on Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Condoleezza

Rice, and Alberto Gonzales.

· Articles of Impeachment Against George W. Bush

by the Center for Constitutional Rights (Melville House, 144

pages, $9.95) is a short book that simply lists and explains

four (multi-part) articles of impeachment

· /George W. Bush versus the U.S. Constitution: The

Downing Street Memos and Deception, Manipulation, Torture,

Retribution, and Cover-ups in the Iraq War and Illegal Domestic

Spying/ by the U.S. House Judiciary Committee Democratic Staff

(Academy Chicago Publishers, 260 pages, $16.95) not only

collects the evidence but also tells us what Congressman John

Conyers, the ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, is

thinking. The full text, minus a new introduction by Joseph

Wilson, is available here

and the

book can be purchased here

.

· /Verdict and Findings of Fact/ by the International

Commission of Inquiry on Crimes Against Humanity Committed by

the Bush Administration of the United States ($10), a report

that looks at five major international crimes and overlaps

significantly with most lists of impeachable offenses. The full

text is available by clicking here

.

· /Impeach Bush: A Funny Li'l Graphical Novel About the

Worstest Pres'dent in the History of Forevar/ (Blatant Comics,

$12.95) is a comic-book account of Bush's impeachable offenses

-- the crimes really are self-evident, but pictures don't hurt.

It can be purchased by clicking here

.

/David Swanson, co-founder of the AfterDowningStreet.org

coalition, works for ImpeachPAC.org ,

which is funding pro-impeachment candidates. Each one has

committed to making the introduction of articles of impeachment

his or her first act in office. Swanson also works for MyDem.org

, which is giving people tools to help make

sure their votes are counted. A former newspaper reporter, he

was the press secretary for Dennis Kucinich's 2004 presidential

campaign./

[This article first appeared on Tomdispatch.com

, a weblog of the Nation Institute,

which offers a steady flow of alternate sources, news, and

opinion from Tom Engelhardt, long time editor in publishing,

/co-founder of the American Empire Project

and author of The End of

Victory Culture

,

a history of American triumphalism in the Cold War, a novel, The

Last Days of Publishing

/,

and in the fall, Mission Unaccomplished

(Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch interviews.]

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