The Sunday
Washington Times ran my op-ed about House Judiciary
Committee chairman John Conyers's (D-Michigan) decision to drop
plans for a probe of ACORN.
Here is the top of it:
Who told House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers,
Michigan Democrat, to lay off the radical activist group ACORN?
The 23-term congressman, who has been enamored of the
aggressively partisan group for years, gave a truly odd
explanation last week when he reaffirmed a May 4 statement that
a probe of ACORN (Association of Community Organizations for
Reform Now) "appears unwarranted at this time."
"The powers that be decided against it," he said Wednesday,
refusing to elaborate. His spokesman Jonathan Godfrey later
said Mr. Conyers was referring to himself as "the powers that
be." Unless you believe that "the powers that be" is a novel
variation of the editorial "we," it's clear Mr. Conyers wasn't
referring to himself and that somebody "got" to him. [...]
For space reasons I took out a reference to the fact that on
Friday I sought a fresh quote from Conyers spokesman Jonathan
Godfrey. He declined to provide one citing the fact that he had
already provided his explanation to the Washington Times
earlier in the week.