<<http://www.dailykos.com/story/2004/3/28/165313/637>>

Republicans under investigation
by kos 
Sun Mar 28th, 2004 at 16:53:13 GMT

For the record, there are no high profile investigations of any Democrats
right now. Too bad the same can't be said about Republicans. In no
particular order:

The Senate's top cop investigated Republican hacking of Democratic
accounts and theft of thousands of documents. After finding probable
cause for wrongdoing, the Senate Judiciary Committee recommended the
Justice Department undertake its own criminal probe.

The House and Senate Intelligence Committees are both investigating
intelligence lapses heading up to the Iraq War.

The Senate Intelligence Committee is investigating Bush's pre-war lies
about Iraq's WMDs and ties to al Qaida. 

Rove, Cheney's entire political team and others are being investigated by
a Justice Department special prosecutor for leaking the name of a covert
CIA agent (Plame) to discredit her husband -- a critic of the
administration's trumped up charges that Iraq was seeking nuclear
material in Niger.

Can anyone forget the 9-11 commission?

HHS Inspector General Dara Corrigan is investigating administration lies
about the true cost of the Medicare bill. Remember, not only did the Bush
Administration undercount the costs (from $395 billion to $521 billion),
but then threatened an auditor with his job if he revealed the true
numbers.

The General Accounting Office is investigating the fake "news reports"
the White House created to promote the Medicare law's new prescription
drug coverage provisions.

And being the gift that keeps on giving, the House Standards of Official
Conduct Committee and the Justice Department are both (and seperately)
investigating bribery allegations as the administration and its
congressional allies twisted arms to get the necessary votes in the House
to pass the Medicare bill.

Tom DeLay is under criminal investigation on whether his Texas political
action committee (Texans for a Republican Majority) improperly financed
the GOP's takeover of the Texas legislature. DeLay has already signaled
he may be forced to step down from his leadership post (even if just
temporarily) if indicted. 

Connecticut Governor John Rowland is being investigated by federal
prosecutors for a shockingly brazen level of corruption. Even the state's
GOP establishment has abandoned the governor, and impeachment proceedings
are likely unless he resigns his post.
That's not including lawsuits against the administration, such as the one
attempting to force Cheney to reveal a list of attendees to his Energy
Task Force meetings. You know the ones -- the meetings Cheney conducted
in secret when he should've been convening meetings of his Terrorism Task
Force (which didn't meet at all before 9-11).

------
Shrub 04:
Don't Switch Horsemen Mid-Apocalypse

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