According to a Republican staffer on the 9/11 commission,
growing public and pundit outrage over commissioner Jamie
Gorelick’s failure to disclose the existence of a Justice
Department memo, had chairman Gov. Tom Kean asking
Gorelick yesterday morning if she would think about stepping
aside.
“The word is she was asked whether she might consider it and she
flat out shut him down,” said the staffer. “We’re in an extremely
difficult spot on this.”
Gorelick’s conflict of interest came to light on Tuesday
afternoon, when a newly declassified 1995 Justice Department memo
written by her when she was serving as Deputy Attorney General was
presented to the commission by Attorney General John
Ashcroft during public testimony. The memo, which mandated
policy that, as it turned out, made it almost impossible for
counter-terrorism investigators to pursue the 9/11 plot before it
unfolded, surprised Gorelick’s fellow commissioners and staff
because, staffers said, she never disclosed its existence to any of
them.
Kean’s quiet attempt to press the issue on Gorelick’s situation
comes at a time when there were mounting calls for the former
Clinton political operative to step aside from not only the House
Judiciary Committee chairman James Sensenbrenner
but families of 9/11 victims concerned that the commission’s report
would be tainted by her presence.
Those families were also calling for Gorelick to be called
before the committee to explain her role in devising a legal
impediment that contributed to the intelligence and law enforcement
failures to combat and prevent terrorist acts.
But according to former Clinton staffers, it’s doubtful Gorelick
will budge. “She’s on that commission for a reason, and it isn’t
because of her brilliant legal mind,” says a former DNC and Clinton
White House staffer. “She’s there to make sure Bush and his team
look as bad as possible and to protect the Clintons and Reno.”
It isn’t just Gorelick who is now in hot water. Based on their
remarks on Wednesday and Thursday, both Kean and fellow
commissioner, former Sen. Slade Gorton are taking
heat from 9/11 families for telling critics during TV interviews to
stay “out of our business.”
Those remarks came in response to questions about Gorelick’s
conflict of interest.
“We’ve got to get these guys out of the limelight,” says the
Republican 9/11 staffer. “Kean has enjoyed the media spotlight a
little too much. Remember, most of these guys are has-beens. They
haven’t experienced this much attention in years. In a matter of
two days they have managed to undo six months of good work that was
done under the radar screen. A few more days of this and the
commission’s work will be tainted.”