Michelle Malkin

Corruptocrat Eric Holder’s GOP Enablers

By Michelle Malkin - Friday, June 15, 2012

While calls for U.S. Attorney General Eric “Stonewall” Holder’s resignation grow and the House GOP gears up for a contempt vote next week, it’s worth remembering how we got into this mess. In two words: feckless bipartisanship.

“I like Barack Obama and want to help him if I can.” That was Utah GOP Sen. Orrin Hatch in January 2009, just weeks before the Senate voted on President Obama’s attorney general nominee, Eric Holder. Right out of the gate, upon Obama’s election in November 2008, Hatch signaled that he would greenlight the administration’s top law enforcer.

“I start with the premise that the president deserves the benefit of the doubt,” the six-term incumbent Hatch told The Hill newspaper. “I don’t think politics should be played with the attorney general.”

Utah voters, mark those words. Bending to bipartisanship for bipartisanship’s sake — and ignoring the obvious consequences — is playing politics.

And, conservatives, please remember the actions of all 19 Republican senators who ignored Holder’s abominable career as a political fixer and confirmed him. “I found Mr. Holder to be a good listener, which is an important prerequisite for any good leader,” Missouri GOP Sen. Kit Bond explained in support of the nomination. “I believe him when he says that he’s willing to take good ideas from wherever they come.”

In addition to Hatch and Bond, the other 17 Senate Republicans who helped put Holder in place at the Justice Department were: Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., Bob Bennett, R-Utah, Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., Susan Collins, R-Maine, Bob Corker, R-Tenn., Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, Judd Gregg, R-N.H., Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., Richard Lugar, R-Ind., John McCain, R-Ariz., Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, Arlen Specter, R-Pa., and George Voinovich, R-Ohio.

It’s not like these GOP enablers weren’t warned over and over about Holder’s shady judgment and questionable ethics. The 2002 House Committee on Government Reform’s report on the Clinton-era Marc Rich pardon scandal spelled out Holder’s willingness to put political ambition above the rule of law. Then-Deputy Attorney General Holder and former White House counsel Jack Quinn, who was representing the fugitive financier Rich, worked together to cut the Justice Department out of the process.

The duo ensured “that the Justice Department, especially the prosecutors of the Southern District of New York, did not have an opportunity to express an opinion on the Rich pardon before it was granted.” The report noted further that “Holder failed to inform the prosecutors under him that the Rich pardon was under consideration, despite the fact that he was aware of the pardon effort for almost two months before it was granted.”

Holder admitted that he allowed his judgment to be overridden by crony political considerations. He told GOP senators he had learned from his “mistake” and that it would make him a better attorney general. But it wasn’t just one “mistake.”

Holder pandered to leftist special interests in engineering clemency for 16 members of the violent terrorist groups Fuerzas Armadas de Liberacion Nacional (FALN) and Los Macheteros — linked by the FBI to more than 130 bombings and six murders. He gave the terrorists unprecedented access to phone calls and consultations as they negotiated their freedom. He hid behind executive privilege covers when asked by victims’ families to explain the decision process. And as a partner at Covington and Burling, the powerhouse D.C.- and N.Y.-based law firm infamous for representing Gitmo detainees, Holder’s opposition to the jihadi detention center raised bright red conflict-of-interest flags.

Is it any wonder that such a serial conniver would now be embroiled in multiple scandals involving the endangerment of national security? And that he would name old pals to run interference for him in his time of need?

To investigate his department’s bloody malfeasance in the Fast and Furious gunwalking scandal, Holder appointed acting DOJ Inspector General Cynthia A. Schnedar. She worked under Holder in the 1990s and had co-filed several legal briefs with him. Schnedar is in hot water for having released secret Fast and Furious audiotapes to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Phoenix before reviewing them. The tapes somehow found their way into the hands of the local ATF office. Both are targets of congressional probes.

To investigate self-aggrandizing White House leaks on jihadi kill lists and computer viruses targeting Iran’s nuclear facilities, Holder named two political appointees. One is Ronald Machen, an Obama donor, a transition team leader and a U.S. Attorney in Washington, D.C., who formerly worked under Holder.

Blind Democrats are outraged at questions about the independence of Holder’s appointees. Johnny-come-lately Republicans are demanding special prosecutors and balking at Holder’s arrogance, obstructionism and wanton disregard for American security and safety. Note: Two of the loudest voices belong to Sens. McCain and Graham, who both approved Holder’s nomination.

Joseph Connor, son of FALN murder victim Frank Connor, was right. In January 2009, he spoke from pain-filled experience: “Holder clearly does not have the judgment, character or values to be attorney general.” GOP surrender-ism cost more innocent lives. For the sake of the victims, let this be a lesson learned — and not repeated again.

COPYRIGHT 2013 MICHELLE MALKIN/CREATORS.COM

Michelle Malkin is a conservative blogger, columnist, regular Fox News contributor, and author of many New York Times bestselling books.

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8 Responses to “Corruptocrat Eric Holder’s GOP Enablers”

  1. TheLookOut says:

    Thanks for your indepth summary on HOW this corrupt

    #%*&#*%# came to be AG. These RINO's are a disgrace.

    Hatch, McCain, and the rest have blood on their hands.

    They are worse than the Dems. They promised to stand

    for up for America, not to go along to get along.

    This country NEEDS, and is crying out for a 3rd party.

    • reunion says:

      a 3rd party would be like adding a new character to "peyton place" (or, pick your soap opera). many of the game preserves in crashing/burning europe have more than 3 parties.

      think on this: only in surreal gov/state-think is the solution for failure more of the same, only bigger, next year. and then realize the insidiousness of this perniciousness: it has filtered down to the mere captives, chorusing the captors, calling for more.

      hair of the dog is not prescription. it is evasion.

    • bahmi says:

      It is necessary for slimes of a feather to stick together. All get their checks signed by the same crook. All are compromised, all report to the same freaks like David Rockefeller and the rest of the world's parasites. All are idiots, look at Congressional approval rates. We are in the midst of idiots that are destroying this country. Throw them out.

  2. Tex Norton says:

    I'm surprised, Michelle, that you're surprised. When it is PC to reward failures at the expense of the successful; When the President can just decide on his own who should be assassinated; When law-abiding citizens are treated as terrorists; What would you expect? Where is the outrage? Up is Down; Left is Right; Black is White. George Orwell foretold of the current circumstances and no one paid any attention. We get what we deserve – good and hard!

    • reunion says:

      "democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard." ~ h. l. mencken

      and who is the "we" in democracy? only the participants.

      this reflexive, ongoing, use of "we" seems to be the flip side of the lynch mob's evasion of individual guilt. instead of none of us individuals, in the majority, who lynched the one, are guilty, it's everyone, including people not even there, not participating, not even condoning, even those castigating, are guilty. either none of us are guilty, or all of us are guilty, is the insistence; we're all in this together.

      nonsense.

      the sins of the fathers, the neighbors, and strangers in every direction & at every distance are theirs & theirs alone.

      repent your venality, voters.

      • devereaux says:

        And that is why America is not a democracy. As a Republic supposedly controlled by the rule of law, the vaguaries of democracy are limited in the damage that can be wrought.

        Of course, when people believe we are a democracy…all bets are off and the rule of law becomes nothing more than a group of words open to interpretation …and not the strict guidelines by which we must act.

        Funny that words lack meaning these days.

        The sooner democracy dies the better…perhaps then the Republic can recover.

        For all those who are shocked by my statement…I suggest you study up on democracy. You will learn that it is nothing more than mob rule…and not the form of Government you long for.

        …..devereaux

        • reunion says:

          "a republic – if you can keep it", said franklin. well he knew what was in store.

          republic – not a democracy – is the brochure, not reality.

  3. Bryan says:

    Dealing with humans is messy business. And always will be. Dealing with politicians is messier. And always will be. It isn't so much the people involved or their initial intentions. New blood is gobbled up by the environment and regurgitated as a shiny new corruptocrat. Joni Mitchell sang about putting up a parking lot. How about a hundred square mile one centered at 1600 PA Ave?

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