Re Rick Perry - Let's Turn the Tables
I
was not much impressed by
Rick Perry during the 2012 campaign, but when he recently sent the
National Guard to the Texas border, he got my vote for 2016. Just as
the Democrats have destroyed with personal attacks supported by an hysterical and corrupt media other Republicans
they consider powerful adversaries (Palin, Christie, Judge Bork, Tom Delay to name
just a few), they are now out to 'get' Perry.
The Partisan Farce to Get Rick Perry
Aug 17, 2014 Bloomberg
By The
Editors
Rosemary Lehmberg, the Democratic district attorney in Travis
County, Texas, spent three weeks in jail last year for drunken
driving, prompting Republican Governor Rick Perry to call on her to
resign. She refused -- and now her supporters hope to have the last
laugh by sending Perry away for a lot longer. The criminal case
against him is a farce and should be dismissed faster than prairie
fire with a tail wind.
Lehmberg’s run-in
with the law drew public attention not only because she had an open
bottle of vodka in her car and a blood-alcohol level three times the
legal limit, but also because a police video exposed her acting
belligerently toward the officers. The judge in the case called her
behavior “deplorable.” Since Perry misses few opportunities to
engage in partisan grandstanding,
he vowed to veto funding for the district attorney’s public
integrity unit unless she resigned. Perry argued that, as a result of
her conduct, Lehmberg was not fit to oversee the unit, which
investigates possible ethics violations.
Partisan motivations aside, it was fair to call her judgment into
question -- and Perry followed through on his vow with a line-item
veto. Round one to the Republicans.
Next, a liberal advocacy group, Texans for Public Justice,
persuaded a judge to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate
whether Perry’s veto threat constituted an abuse of power. Proving
the legal maxim that a prosecutor can get a grand jury to indict
a ham sandwich, Perry now faces two indictments for abusing the
powers of his office. One of them rests on a Texas law that forbids
elected officials to misuse “government property, services or
personnel" -- which is clearly not what happened here. The
second prohibits officials from engaging in coercion, a crime that is
akin to bribery. Few legal observers give the prosecution much chance
for success in court. But conviction isn't the goal here. Harassment
and humiliation are. Soon, Perry will have to turn himself in to
police. Round two to the Democrats.
This would be ordinary partisan tit for tat, except that a law
enforcement office is involved. Political disputes should be resolved
in political venues -- legislative bodies and public debates -- not
in criminal courts. If Perry’s veto is an abuse of power, then the
state legislature could impeach him, as it did Texas
Governor James “Pa” Ferguson nearly 100 years ago.
Impeachment, however, is entirely unnecessary: The legislature could
simply vote to override Perry’s line-item veto. For failing to do
so, should the entire legislature be indicted?
Of course not. Perry is guilty of partisan behavior, not felonious
conduct. There's been no evidence to support the claim that he vetoed
the funds to prevent the public integrity unit from investigating
allegations of impropriety by the state’s Cancer Prevention and
Research Center.
Much of the commentary following the indictment has involved
speculation about how much it will damage Perry’s presidential
aspirations. Some liberal pundits seem gleeful.
Don’t be fooled. This is more likely to rally Republicans to
Perry’s side -- earning him new supporters and donors -- and to
make Texas Democrats look as craven as the Republicans who are
seeking to impeach President Barack Obama. And that will mean giving
back round two. .
Labels: Politics
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