Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
RNC Now Seeks Shelter of Executive Privilege
by Jason Leopold The Republican National Committee said it will not abide by a subpoena and turn over documents to a Congressional committee investigating the firings of at least eight US attorneys last year because the RNC is waiting to see if the White House will assert executive privilege over RNC documents at the center of the controversy, according to an outside law firm retained by the RNC.
The White House has asserted executive privilege to block senior administration officials from testifying before Congress about their involvement in the decision to fire the federal prosecutors. Moreover, the White House has cited executive privilege in declining to turn over specific documents to Congress that may shed further light on the circumstances behind the attorney firings.
The US attorneys believe they were fired for partisan political
reasons. In some instances, the US attorneys said they were pressured
by Republican lawmakers and RNC operatives to file criminal charges
against Democrats at the center of public corruption probes prior to
last year's midterm election as well as individual cases of voter
fraud, which the attorneys said was based on weak evidence, in order to
cast a dark cloud over Democratic incumbents and swing election results
toward Republican challengers.
Earlier this year, internal Justice Department documents related
to behind-the-scenes discussions involving the US attorney firings
revealed some Bush administration officials have primarily used email
accounts maintained by the RNC to conduct official White House business
in what appears to be a violation of the Presidential Records Act. The
RNC is believed to have thousands of pages of documents from White
House officials in its possession, dating back to 2005, that could
answer lingering questions about the role the administration played in
the decision to fire the US attorneys.
The latest salvo
between the RNC and Congress over the documents under subpoena sets the
stage for a legal showdown between the House and RNC Chairman Robert
Duncan, who Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers threatened to
hold in contempt if documents and internal RNC emails relating to the
Congressional probe are not turned over to his committee. Neither
Conyers nor a spokesman for the congressman returned calls for comment
on Monday. Presumably, any further legal action would take place when
Congress returns from its summer vacation next month.
In a
letter sent on Friday to Conyers, Robert Kelner, an attorney at
Covington & Burling in Washington, DC, said the White House
counsel's office instructed the RNC not to "produce Category Two
documents at this time."
According to a letter Conyers sent
Kelner on August 2, the so-called "Category Two" documents include
"hundreds of pages, as relating to communications with or among White
House officials concerning candidates for US Attorney positions in the
Central District of California, the Middle District of Tennessee, and
the District of Montana."
At issue is whether the "Category
Two" documents are relevant to the Judiciary Committee's investigation
into the firings of the US attorneys. The White House has taken the
position that President Bush has the "constitutional prerogative" to
nominate US attorneys and, therefore, any discussion about the issue
between Bush administration officials and RNC officials is off limits
to Congress. Conyers says Congress has the right to obtain the
documents regarding the White House's interest in selecting US
attorneys in specific parts of the country.
The Judiciary
Committee chairman has taken issue with the White House's
interpretation of the law, stating, "the president has no inviolable
constitutional prerogative to nominate US Attorneys."
"Instead, US Attorneys are inferior officers under Article II, section
2 of the Constitution, and are nominated by the President because
Congress has provided for that authority," Conyers said in his August 2
letter to Kelner.
Kelner's response to Conyers states that
the White House counsel's office informed him the documents Conyers's
committee is attempting to obtain "appears to be outside the scope of
the Committee's investigative authority, which is limited to areas
which Congress may legislate, and instructed the RNC not to produce the
Category Two documents at this time."
"Accordingly, the RNC
is awaiting a determination by the White House as to whether it will
invoke executive privilege over those documents," Kelner's letter says.
"
In the meantime, the RNC is proceeding deliberately and cautiously by
withholding them pending the outcome of the White House's discussion
with the Committee and concerning the White House's decision concerning
invoking the privilege."
Kelner said the RNC would be
"willing to accept your invitation to meet with your staff, together
with representatives of the White House Counsel's office to discuss
these issues in greater detail."
The Judiciary Committee
voted last month to hold in contempt former White House counsel Harriet
Miers and President Bush's chief of staff, Joshua Bolten. Miers and
Bolten cited Bush's assertion of executive privilege in withholding
internal executive branch documents from Congress and in refusing to
testify before the panel about the US attorney dismissals.
President
Bush said he would instruct the Department of Justice not to permit the
US attorney for the District of Columbia to impanel a grand jury to
compel his aides' testimony, on grounds it would interfere with Bush's
assertion of executive privilege.
Letters sent to the RNC
and the Bush/Cheney 2004 Campaign in April by Congressman Henry Waxman,
chairman of the House Oversight and Governmental Reform Committee,
urged the two groups to preserve all emails sent by White House
officials from their servers, because of their relevance to
Congressional probes, including the US attorney firings.
Jason Leopold is senior editor and reporter for Truthout. He received a
Project Censored award in 2007 for his story on Halliburton's work in
Iran.