Sent to you by Sean McBride via Google Reader: The right-wing
understanding of Government via Salon: Glenn Greenwald by Glenn
Greenwald on 7/18/08
(updated below)

Brad Blakeman is a former Deputy Assistant to President Bush and is
currently the CEO of Freedom's Watch, the group formed last year at the
American Enterprise Institute by some of the nation's largest GOP
donors (and Ari Fleisher), devoted to advocating the neoconservative
agenda. On Wednesday night, Blakeman was on the Dan Abrams Show
discussing the White House's refusal to turn over to Congress FBI
interviews with Bush and Cheney in the Plame investigation, based on a
brand new form of executive privilege invented by Attorney General
Michael Mukasey. Here's how Blakeman justified Mukasey's obstructionist
actions:Look, what you have is a very smart attorney general who's
trying to protect his client and that's the president of the United
States, an executive privilege.That is about as warped a view of how
our Government is supposed to work as one can imagine. The core
attribute of the Justice Department is independence, not allegiance to
the President as "client." The President has his own lawyers in the
White House Counsel's Office. The Attorney General is not and never was
one of those lawyers. To the contrary, the Attorney General represents
the people of the United States -- if he has any "client," that's who
it is -- and is often required to take positions and actions adverse to
the President. Few things could subvert -- and have subverted -- the
American justice system more than thinking of the President as being
the "client" of the Attorney General.

This all used to be so basic. But the belief that the DOJ exists to
advance the interests and wishes of the President has become a central
premise of how our Government now works. The Justice Department has
been transformed into but another cog in the instruments of Government
that protect and serve the President. And that transformation isn't
unique to Alberto Gonzales (who, during a CNN interview while Attorney
General, actually referred to Bush as "my client"), as The Washington
Post's Dan Froomkin pointed out yesterday:Michael Mukasey has President
Bush's back.

Mukasey succeeded toady Alberto Gonzales as attorney general last fall.
But the notion that he would restore independence to that post took a
big hit yesterday when he refused to turn over to a House committee key
documents related to the CIA leak investigation.

Mukasey may have a better reputation than Gonzales, but it turns out he
is just as willing to use his power to protect the White House from
embarrassing revelations.That's why a former White House official and
top right-wing activist like Blakeman can go on television and simply
proclaim (without anyone contradicting him) that the President is the
Attorney General's "client" and that whatever the Attorney General does
to protect the President is accordingly justified in the same way that
a standard lawyer's duty is to protect "his client's" interests.
Obviously, Blakeman's understanding of the most basic aspects of how
our Government works is painfully ignorant, but -- thanks not only to
the Bush administration but also to one of the most derelict Congresses
in history -- that view also now accurately reflects the reality of how
the Government actually functions.

UPDATE: As Jim White notes in comments, former White House Sara Taylor
actually went before the Senate and testified that she understood that
she took an oath when she went to the White House that was "an oath to
the President":


It's easy to mock Blakeman's warped understanding of how our Government
works, but it isn't principally the by-product of ignorance but,
instead, a reflection of how our Government actually now functions.

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