By The Prowler on 3.19.07 @ 12:08AM
Scales fall from eyes at Justice. Also: Romney speech outreach. Fearing Fred Thompson.
LEAKING AND PLOTTING
As another Department of Justice paper dump related to the botched
firings of eight U.S. Attorneys takes place on Capitol Hill today,
it is becoming increasingly clear that Department of Justice
insiders have been using the controversy to perpetrate what some
Bush Administration loyalists are calling a "coup." Those
activities appear to be occurring in the offices of the Deputy
Attorney General and the Executive Office for U.S. Attorneys.
According to Senate Judiciary sources, committee chairman Sen.
Patrick Leahy has asked his Democratic attorneys
to examine whether Deputy Attorney General Paul
McNulty's chief of staff, Michael J.
Elston -- by calling one of the outgoing U.S. Attorneys
and discouraging him from speaking too negatively about the events
-- might have attempted to obstruct the House and Senate's
investigations of the U.S. Attorney firings. Elston has disputed
that the calls were threatening.
The Republican staff on the Senate Judiciary Committee,
meanwhile, is looking into improper sharing of Department of
Justice personnel records by career DOJ employees with members of
the legal community.
"We've seen evidence that some state and federal judges with
ties to the Democrat Party were given personnel and performance
review materials about certain U.S. Attorneys across the country,"
says a Judiciary Committee staffer. "Some of the review materials
were never seen by the Attorney General and his staff, but were
reviewed within the Deputy Attorney General's office, as well as by
professional staff at the Executive Office for U.S. Attorneys. [The
leaks were] clearly part of a campaign to embarrass the U.S.
Attorneys."
Meanwhile, The American Spectator has learned that
members of McNulty's staff are supporting the possible nomination
to one of the vacant U.S. Attorney slots of a former government
lawyer who had an affair with a colleague and now resides with not
one, but two women in what some in the DAG's office have termed a
"tri-sexual" relationship.
"That residential situation would be adjusted if the name was
put forward," says someone familiar with the thinking in McNulty's
office.
The White House continues to struggle with the ongoing
controversy over the Department of Justice's decision to push out
eight U.S. Attorneys last December, in part because of leaks that
continue over at the Department of Justice.
"Judge [Alberto] Gonzales is
not being well served by people in senior positions over there, who
perhaps see an opportunity to push him out the door to create
opportunities for others," says a White House source.
When asked to be specific, the source declined, but others
inside the White House and the DOJ suspect that the staff of Deputy
Attorney General McNulty has been the most active, anti-Gonzales
leakers in the past week.
"McNulty's crew has been pretty confident that they aren't going
to get taken down in this whole mess. They have been acting
downright cocky with me," says a reporter who works out of the
Justice Department.
The White House has complained to the Justice Department about
the release of documents and e-mails it has not seen or been made
aware of. "Reporters are asking about things we've never seen,"
says another White House source. "It's just drip, drip, drip, and
it's clearly an organized leaking effort."
Sources familiar with the staff of the Deputy Attorney General
say its members believe he is in line to replace Gonzales as
Attorney General at least on an interim basis, but that McNulty
wants the job permanently.
"What's interesting is that when you look at the e-mail traffic
from [former Gonzales chief of staff] Kyle Sampson
on the plans to remove some U.S. Attorneys, McNulty is cc'd on a
few of them. He clearly knew what was going on," says a Republican
Senate Judiciary staffer. "We wonder why the media is giving him a
break."
Besides Sampson, some who weren't given a break, and should have
been, are senior Gonzales aide Monica Goodling and
EOUSA director and former U.S. Attorney Michael
Battle.
"There is not a single bit of evidence, not even a whiff, that
any of them did anything illegal, improper or even wrong," says a
Democrat staffer on the House Judiciary Committee, who knows
Sampson and Goodling. "We feel bad for them that they're caught up
in a political pile-on. You'd think the White House or Gonzales
would give them some support."
Lost in the fog of battle is that Sampson walked the White House
away from the notion of asking all 93 U.S. Attorneys to submit
their resignations. While Goodling appears to have done nothing
more than find -- at the request of the White House and the
Attorney General's office -- a transition post for U.S. Attorney
designate Tim Griffin, and to meet with New Mexico
Republican Party officials on a matter she was not informed of in
advance, according to e-mail released by the House Judiciary
Committee.
HIGH NOONAN
Former Governor Mitt Romney, who insists he is a
Reagan Republican, is attempting to further burnish that
self-imposed mantle by hiring former Reagan Administration
speechwriter Peggy Noonan, according to campaign
insiders.
Noonan, according to Romney sources, has spent time in Boston
with Romney, and around the time of such a meeting published a
column in the Wall Street Journal examining one of
Romney's chief rivals for the Republican nomination, Sen. John
McCain.
Noonan and Romney haven't discussed a job, according to the
sources. Thus far, it has been Romney ruminating about the need to
bulk up on talent in every area. "We don't know if Noonan is
interested, but we're interested in her," says a fundraiser with
ties to the Romney camp. "I heard the meeting went well."
The Noonan hire would be but another shakeup in Romney's ranks
in the past few weeks. Already, Romney has adjusted his national
field operations, as well as his finance team. There is also talk
that the campaign is attempting to tweak its policy positions,
holding brainstorming sessions in Washington last week with a
diverse group of lobbyists and former Bush and Reagan
Administration staffers.
WHO'S AFRAID OF FRED?
Pajamas Media
likes to portray itself as a cutting edge online media resource. So
why isn't it including Former Tennessee Sen. Fred
Thompson in its weekly presidential poll? That's what one
blogger keeps asking, with nary and answer from the "Inside the
Beltway" PJs crowd.
The blogger, PeteRepublic, has pulled the PJ online vote
widget from his site in protest over the PJ Media decision to not
include Thompson, an undeclared candidate who is the talk of
conservatives and Republicans. Meanwhile, Newt
Gingrich, also undeclared, is being touted in the poll.
Odd.
Thompson appears to be going about his business -- being the
most successful New York City District Attorney in history (we're
talking about at least a 98% conviction record here, folks) on
Law & Order, as well as the "voice of reason" on ABC
Radio.
Meanwhile, the "Draft Fred Thompson for President" campaign
seems to be taking on a life of its own. A late-Friday poll on the
popular conservative blog site, RedState, shows that 75% of respondents support
a Fred Thompson run for the presidency. A separate poll organized
by an unauthorized "Draft Fred" website has collected more than a
100,000 respondents, again, with more than 70% supporting a Fred
Thompson run. Yet another poll on GOPNation, has
Thompson well ahead of all other Republican nominees.
On Friday, Sen. Bill Frist, sent an e-mail to
supporters of his political action committee, VOLPAC, saying that
he had spoken with Thompson on Thursday night and encouraged him to
run. Thompson has not publicly commented on any of these
activities, beyond his general comments on Fox News Sunday and the
Sean Hannity radio show that he is mulling a run.
"What's interesting about all of this is how organic and
spontaneous it appears to be," says a source who works on a
Republican presidential campaign. "The media keeps saying there is
dissatisfaction with the current crop of candidates, and this
Thompson boomlet would appear to confirm that."
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