In July 2005, 122 members of Congress, along with
more than 500,000 Americans, sent a letter to President George W.
Bush, asking him to verify whether the assertions set forth in the
so-called "Downing Street Minutes" were accurate. The
president never responded.
That lack of response prompted Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.),
Ranking Member of the House Judiciary Committee, to commission his
staff to write a report examining the administration's manipulation
and deception during the lead-up to the invasion of Iraq. When the
New York Times reported in December 2005 that President Bush had
approved widespread warrantless domestic surveillance of innocent
Americans, (later corroborated in May 2006 by USA Today), Conyers
asked his staff to document those abuses as well. The final report,
"The Constitution In Crisis," released in August, with
little attention from the mainstream media, is a compelling indictment
of the Bush administration.
Academy Chicago Publishers recently published the
report as a book, entitled “George W. Bush versus the U.S. Constitution”.
Below, In These Times has excerpted the book's foreword by Rep.
Conyers, who explains the dangers to the Constitution posed by the
Bush administration's assertion of a "unitary executive."
Scandals such as Watergate and Iran-Contra are widely
considered to be constitutional crises, in the sense that the executive
branch was acting in violation of the law and in tension with the
majority party in the Congress. But the system of checks and balances
put in place by the Founding Fathers worked, the abuses were investigated,
and actions were taken-even if presidential pardons ultimately prevented
a full measure of justice.
The situation we find ourselves in today under the
administration of George W. Bush is systemically different. The
alleged acts of wrongdoing my staff has documented-which include
making misleading statements about the decision to go to war, manipulating
intelligence, facilitating and countenancing torture, using classified
information to out a CIA agent, and violating federal surveillance
and privacy laws-are quite serious. However, the current majority
party has shown little inclination to engage in basic oversight,
let alone question the administration directly. The media, though
showing some signs of aggressiveness, is increasingly concentrated
and all too often unwilling to risk the enmity or legal challenge
from the party in charge. At the same time, unlike previous threats
to civil liberties posed by the Civil War (suspension of habeas
corpus and eviction of Jews from portions of the Southern States),
World War I (anti-immigrant "Palmer Raids"), World War
II (internment of Japanese-Americans), and the Vietnam War (COINTELPRO),
the risks to our citizens' rights today are potentially more grave,
as the war on terror has no specific end point.
Although, on occasion, the courts are able to serve
as a partial check on the unilateral overreaching of the executive
branch-as they did in the recent Hamdan v. Rumsfeld decision, invalidating
the president's military tribunal rules-the unfortunate reality
remains that we are a long way from being out of the constitutional
woods under the dangerous combination of an imperial Bush presidency
and a compliant GOP Congress. I say this for several reasons. The
Hamdan decision itself was approved by only five justices (three
justices dissented, and Chief Justice Roberts recused himself because
he had previously ruled in favor of the administration) and was
written by 86-year old Justice Stevens. In the event of his retirement
in the next two years, the Court's balance would probably be tipped
as he would undoubtedly be replaced by another justice in the Scalia-Thomas-Roberts-Alito
mode, favoring an all-powerful “unitary executive”. In the very
first hearing held on the decision, the administration witness testified
that "the president is always right," and severely criticized
the Court's decision. The Republican majority also appears poised
to use the decision to score political points rather than to reassert
congressional prerogatives: that House Majority Leader Boehner disingenuously
declared the case "offers a clear choice between Capitol Hill
Democrats who celebrate offering special privileges to violent terrorists,
and Republicans who want the president to have the necessary tools
to prosecute and achieve victory in the Global War on Terror."
Thus, notwithstanding the relevance of the Hamdan
decision, I believe our Constitution remains in crisis. We cannot
count on a single judicial decision to reclaim the rule of law or
resurrect the system of checks and balances envisioned by the Founding
Fathers. Rather, we need to restore a vigilant Congress, an independent
judiciary, a law-abiding president, and a vigorous free press that
has served our nation so well throughout our history.
I believe it is essential that we come together as
a nation to confront religious extremism and despicable regimes
abroad as well as terrorist tactics at home. However, as a veteran,
I recognize that we do no service to our brave armed forces by asking
them to engage in military conflict under false pretenses and without
adequate resources. Nor do we advance the cause of fighting terrorism
if our government takes constitutionally dubious short cuts with
little law enforcement value, that alienate the very groups in this
country whose cooperation is central to fighting this seminal battle.
Many of us remember a time when the powers of our
government were horribly abused. Those of us who lived through the
Vietnam conflict know the damage that can result when our government
misleads its citizens about war. As one who was included on President
Nixon's "enemies list," I am all too familiar with the
specter of unlawful government intrusion. In the face of these lessons,
I believe it is imperative that we never lose our voice of dissent,
regardless of political pressure. As Martin Luther King said, "There
comes a time when silence is betrayal." None of us should be
bullied or intimidated as when the executive branch charges that
those who criticize their actions are "aiding the terrorists"
and "giving ammunition to America's enemies," or when
the executive warns that "Americans need to watch what they
say," as this administration has done.
It is tragic that our nation has invaded another sovereign
nation because "the intelligence and facts were being fixed
around the policy," and that millions of innocent Americans
have been subject to government surveillance outside proper legal
process. It is unforgivable that Congress has been unwilling to
examine these matters or take actions to prevent these circumstances
from occurring again. Since the majority party is unwilling to fulfill
their oversight responsibilities, it is incumbent on individual
members of Congress, as well as the American public, to act to protect
our constitutional form of government.
It should be noted that without the assistance of
the "blogosphere" and other Internet-based media, it would
have been impossible for my staff to assemble all of the information,
sources and other materials that they did, and I would like to offer
them my heartfelt thanks. Whereas the so-called "mainstream
media" have frequently been willing to look past the abuses
of the Bush administration, the blogosophere has proven to be a
new and important bulwark of our nation's First Amendment freedoms.
This article by Rep. Conyers was originally published
on In These Times. |