White House Offers to Have Rove, Miers Lie to Congress in Secret Session

Congress is getting ready to subpoena Rove and Miers, which likely will trigger a claim of executive privilege and at least a messy court action if not a political showdown. So the White House comes out with its counter-offer: they'll testify in secret session, so long as there is no transcript and they're not under oath.

Translation: we want to be able to lie to Congress in a way that creates neither liability nor evidence — so we can lie about our lying after the fact and no one can prove us wrong.

This is beyond chutzpah!

This entry was posted in Politics: US: GW Bush Scandals. Bookmark the permalink.

6 Responses to White House Offers to Have Rove, Miers Lie to Congress in Secret Session

  1. BroD says:

    Yeah, schedule it for April Fool’s Day

  2. execprivquestion says:

    Rove has made several public and on-the-record comments regarding the DOJ US Attorney purge.
    Miers is now in private life, and not employed by the WH at all.
    Do you know how these facts accept executive privilege claim?

    And hey, the big mass firing came on Dec. 7. Isn’t there some fancy Legal Latin for that -“thing speaks for itself”? Can we say “Book -em” yet?

  3. execprivquestion says:

    ‘accept executive privilege’ ? Sorry, meant ‘affect executive privilege’ .

  4. Stephanie says:

    It should be interesting to see what comes of all this. I absolutely don’t want them to have a secret session. These are issues that matter to the public, and need to be aired publicly. To do otherwise is to undermine any remaining trust in this administration.

  5. IANAL, but I believe:

    1) Rove’s on-the-record public statements are not worth the paper they’re not printed on. Lying under oath is a crime, lying in politics is business as usual.

    2) Executive privilege claims apply to the event, even if the advisor subsequently leave the government.

  6. It should be interesting to see what comes of all this. I absolutely don’t want them to have a secret session. These are issues that matter to the public, and need to be aired publicly. To do otherwise is to undermine any remaining trust in this administration.

Comments are closed.