By Lisa Fabrizio on 7.21.05 @ 12:07AM
A funny thing happened on the way to the nation's highest forum last week.
A funny thing happened on the way to the nation's highest forum
last week. After Harry Reid attempted to use the well of the U.S.
Senate to advance his party's frivolous attempt at ousting Karl
Rove for outing Joe Wilson's wife, GOP leaders actually fought
back. After four years of quietly beating the minority to a pulp
behind the scenes and at the ballot box, Bill Frist and company
exhibited a rare public display of political payback.
Amid the undulating and ever-changing accusations of Republican
skullduggery, the liberal left -- ever reliant on its faithful
media wing -- finally turned its attention away from the balmy
climes of Guantanamo Bay and focused on its favorite beltway
bogeyman, Rove.
Against this latest threat to national security, Democrats sent
the steely-eyed sniper Reid and his poisoned legislative pen to
write the following amendment (#1222) to the Homeland Security
Appropriations Bill:
No Federal employee who discloses, or has
disclosed, classified information, including the identity
of a covert agent of the Central Intelligence Agency, to a person
not authorized to receive such information shall be permitted to
hold a security clearance for access to such information.
Faster than you can say "ex post facto law," the majority leapt
into action. Cherry-cheeked assassin Mitch McConnell then asked
that the Frist Amendment (#1223) be read:
Any federal officeholder who makes references to a
classified Federal Bureau of Investigation report on the floor of
the United States Senate, or any federal officeholder that
makes a statement based on a FBI agent's comments which is used as
propaganda by terrorist organizations thereby putting our
servicemen and women at risk, shall not be permitted
access to such information or to hold a security clearance for
access to such information.
Childish though this Durbin-for-Rove tit-for-tat may seem, it
marked a rare defiance by Republicans in the face of the liberal
mud-slinging machine. Right-wing supporters have clearly longed for
some red meat from their Senate leaders and have generally come up
hungry. Not this time. Even the usually staid Pat Roberts, summing
up the facts of the case, got worked up:
"What we have here is a Special Prosecutor with a lot of leaks;
we have a reporter in jail for a story she did not write; we have a
steady stream of leaks about every aspect of this case; we have the
Washington press corps in full attack mode; and, finally, before we
have all the facts known, we have my colleagues across the aisle
calling for Karl Rove's resignation, if not incarceration. So much
for the presumption of innocence."
And here is McConnell on Joe Biden:
"Statements on the Senate floor -- out here on the Senate floor
-- comparing our service men and women to tyrannical regimes that
result in risking their safety must not and should not stand. I
hope when the Senate has an opportunity to address both of these
amendments shortly, the Reid amendment will be defeated and the
Frist amendment will be adopted."
Of course, both amendments failed as sanity was restored after
ninety minutes of partisan high jinks and rhetorical flourish
concluded. But the political "gotcha" game continues with the
left's jihad against Karl Rove, even as the GOP shows signs of
using their own tactics against them. And it's not as if some
current Democrats haven't had their own run-ins with security issues in the not-too-distant
past.
Harry Reid underhandedly alluded to "a problem" in the
confidential FBI files of judicial nominee Henry Saad. John Kerry
let slip the name of an undercover CIA officer in a question to
John Bolton at his confirmation hearing, even as Mr. Bolton tried
to cover up the gaffe by referring to the agent as "Mr. Smith" in
his reply.
And who, but Democrats, can forget former National Security
Adviser Sandy Berger, who pleaded guilty to stealing and destroying
classified material in advance of the 9/11 Commission report and
then lied about the whole matter? Berger, who was a sure bet to
receive a high cabinet post in the Kerry administration had there
been one, was forced to leave his post as campaign advisor on
matters of foreign police and national security.
Which all leads back to another Kerry campaign adviser, Joe
Wilson, who joined the team just prior to his first
star-turn, the fatuous "sixteen words" tour in 2003. Shortly after
hitting the hustings, diplomat Wilson said, "I don't care who you
vote for, but get out there and caucus. Don't leave it to the
neoconservatives and evangelical Christians."
Out of mothballs after failing to spur his candidate to victory,
Wilson is once again making the media rounds as a left-wing
darling, even though most of his allegations have been discredited.
This has never stopped Democrats from attacking the president, his
administration and his party. But this time they may have a fight
on their hands.
Lisa
Fabrizio is a columnist who hails from Connecticut. You may
write her at mailbox@lisafab.com.
topics:
Joe Biden, Harry Reid, Law