Today
in The Hill, House Speaker Dennis Hastert and Majority Leader
John Boehner continue their public moaning about the supposed
unconstitutionality of the FBI search last weekend of the office of
troubled Rep. William Jefferson, D-LA. As Archie Bunker would say,
they should stifle themselves. Their complaints are going over VERY
badly politically with an American public increasingly outraged
about horrible congressional ethics and Congress' mentality of
being entitled to favors and special deference. Even if they truly
believe there is a constitutional problem with the search, they
should pursue their complaints less publicly; their moaning makes
them look as if they care more about their own prerogatives than
they do about what appears to be horrible bribery in their midst.
Meanwhile, they probably need a refresher on the COnstitution
itself: A carefully crafted search warrant will not, on its face,
violate the "speech and debate" clause in the COnstitution that
protects Congressmen from prosecution for political speech or
action. That clause gives individual members freedom to vote their
conscience and speak their minds -- not to use public office
buildings to hide evidence of rank corruption.
topics:
John Boehner, Constitution