Why We Have to Look Back



By John Conyers Jr.
Updated: Friday, January 16, 2009



This week, I released "Reining in the Imperial Presidency," a 486-page 
report detailing the abuses and excesses of the Bush administration and 
recommending steps to address them. Arthur Schlesinger Jr. popularized the 
term "imperial presidency" in the 1970s to describe an executive who had 
assumed more power than the Constitution allows and circumvented the checks 
and balances fundamental to our three-branch system of government. Until 
recently, the Nixon administration seemed to represent a singular embodiment 
of the idea. Unfortunately, it is clear that the threat of the imperial 
presidency lives on and, indeed, reached new heights under George W. Bush.

As this report documents, there was the administration's contrived drive to 
a needless war of aggression with Iraq, based on manipulated intelligence 
and facts that were "fixed around the policy." There was its politicization 
of the Justice Department; unconscionable and possibly illegal policies on 
detention, interrogation and extraordinary rendition; warrantless wiretaps 
of American citizens; the ravaging of our regulatory system and the use of 
signing statements to override the laws of the land; and the intimidation 
and silencing of critics and whistle-blowers who dared to tell fellow 
citizens what was being done in their name. And all of this was hidden 
behind an unprecedented veil of secrecy and outlandish claims of privilege.

I understand that many feel we should just move on. They worry that 
addressing these actions by the Bush administration will divert precious 
energy from the serious challenges facing our nation. I understand the power 
of that impulse. Indeed, I want to move on as well -- there are so many 
things that I would rather work on than further review of Bush's presidency. 
But in my view it would not be responsible to start our journey forward 
without first knowing exactly where we are.

We cannot rebuild the appropriate balance between the branches of government 
without fully understanding how that relationship has been distorted. 
Likewise, we cannot set an appropriate baseline for future presidential 
conduct without documenting and correcting the presidential excesses that 
have just occurred. After the Nixon imperial presidency, critical reviews 
such as the Church and Pike committees led to fundamental reforms that have 
served our nation well. Comparable steps are needed to begin the process of 
reining in the legacy of the Bush imperial presidency. I consider these 
three points crucial:


First, Congress should continue to pursue its document requests and 
subpoenas that were stonewalled under President Bush. Doing so will make 
clear that no executive can forever hide its misdeeds from the public.

Second, Congress should create an independent blue-ribbon panel or similar 
body to investigate a host of previously unreviewable activities of the Bush 
administration, including its detention, interrogation and surveillance 
programs. Only by chronicling and confronting the past in a comprehensive, 
bipartisan fashion can we reclaim our moral authority and establish a 
credible path forward to meet the complex challenges of a post-Sept. 11 
world.

Third, the new administration should conduct an independent criminal probe 
into whether any laws were broken in connection with these activities. Just 
this week, in the pages of this newspaper, a Guantanamo Bay official 
acknowledged that a suspect there had been "tortured" -- her exact word --  
in apparent violation of the law. The law is the law, and, if criminal 
conduct occurred, those responsible -- particularly those who ordered and 
approved the violations -- must be held accountable.

Some day, there is bound to be another national security crisis in America. 
A future president will face the same fear and uncertainty that we did after 
Sept. 11, 2001, and will feel the same temptation to believe that the ends 
justify the means -- temptation that drew our nation over to the "dark side" 
under the leadership of President Bush and Vice President Cheney. If those 
temptations are to be resisted -- if we are to face new threats in a manner 
that keeps faith with our values and strengthens rather than diminishes our 
authority around the world -- we must fully learn the lessons of our recent 
past.

The writer, a Democrat, represents Michigan's 14th District in the U.S. 
House and is chairman of the Judiciary Committee.

http://mobile.washingtonpost.com/detail.jsp?key=339333&rc=op&p=1&all=1 

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"ShadowGovernment" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/ShadowGovernment
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to