Author Topic: In ‘88, Pelosi Voted to Impeach Hastings —  (Read 1420 times)

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sirs

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In ‘88, Pelosi Voted to Impeach Hastings —
« on: November 21, 2006, 03:05:59 AM »
Will She Support Him Now?

Pelosi, Hoyer, Conyers, Rangel, Frank, Waxman — they all voted to impeach.

By Byron York

On August 3, 1988, the House of Representatives voted on a resolution, co-sponsored by Michigan Democratic Rep. John Conyers, to impeach Alcee Hastings, the federal judge in Florida accused of conspiring to take a bribe. On that day 18 years ago, some of the Democrats who are today preparing to take power in the House were relatively new to the job; others were, even then, veterans who had served in Congress for years. For both, the vote was a rarity; Hastings was just the 10th judge in U.S. history to face impeachment.

One of the newcomers to the House was the future Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who had been in office a little more than a year. She voted to impeach Hastings.

Rep. Steny Hoyer, the future Majority Leader, also voted to impeach. And so did the lawmakers who will soon chair powerful House committees. Rep. Conyers, now in line to become chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, voted to impeach. Rep. Charles Rangel, soon to chair the Ways and Means Committee, voted to impeach. Rep. Barney Frank, in line to head the Financial Services Committee, voted to impeach. Rep. Henry Waxman, next chair of the Government Reform Committee, voted to impeach. Rep. John Dingell, in line to chair the Energy and Commerce Committee, voted to impeach. Rep. George Miller, soon to head the Education and the Workforce Committee, voted to impeach. Rep. David Obey, in line to chair the Appropriations Committee, voted to impeach. Rep. Ike Skelton, next chair of the Armed Services Committee, voted to impeach. Rep. John Spratt, next in line for the Budget Committee, voted to impeach. Rep. Howard Berman, next head of the Ethics Committee, voted to impeach. Rep. Tom Lantos, in line to chair the International Relations Committee, voted to impeach. And Rep. Louise Slaughter, next chair of the Rules Committee, voted to impeach.

So did other well-known Democratic lawmakers like Rep. John Lewis, Rep. (and later Sen.) Barbara Boxer, Rep. (and later Sen.) Charles Schumer, Rep. (and later Sen.) Richard Durbin, Rep. Ed Markey, Rep. Ron Dellums, Rep. Julian Dixon, and Rep. Richard Gephardt.

In fact, just about everybody in the House voted to impeach Judge Hastings: the vote was 413 to 3. (Just for record, the three who voted against impeachment were Reps. Gus Savage, Mervyn Dymally, and Edward Roybal.)

A few of those members have left the House, moved on to the Senate, or died. But the ones who remain — the ones who now have the seniority to hold influential positions — have another tie to Hastings: They’ve been his colleagues for more than a dozen years. Hastings, who was convicted in the Senate but not barred from holding future office, ran for Congress himself in 1992, winning a seat from Florida’s 23rd District. And now, because incoming Speaker Pelosi has apparently ruled out the appointment of next-in-line Rep. Jane Harman to chair the House Intelligence Committee, Hastings appears to be headed toward the top position on that panel — one of the most sensitive and responsible posts on Capitol Hill.

The question of whether Hastings should be put in charge of the Intelligence Committee is not as clear-cut as the vote to impeach him years ago. For one thing, these days the 43-member Congressional Black Caucus is solidly behind Hastings, who is black. That’s a much different situation from 1988, when Conyers, a founding member of the CBC, voted against Hastings, along with fellow founders Rangel, Dellums, William Clay, and Louis Stokes. (In fact, all the founders of the CBC who were in the House in 1988 voted to impeach Hastings.)

Late last week, the CBC sent a letter to Pelosi affirming the group’s support for Hastings “The CBC sent a letter to Ms. Pelosi just to let her know that the CBC is behind Mr. Hastings 100 percent,” CBC spokesman Myra Dandridge told National Review Online Friday. CBC officials declined to release the letter itself, but Dandridge said it was sent after CBC members discussed the Hastings issue at their weekly meeting on Wednesday.

On the other hand, the 37-member Blue Dog Coalition, a group of moderate Democrats, has sent a letter of its own to Pelosi, this one in support of Harman (a Blue Dog member herself). “She exemplifies all the reasons the American people instilled their trust in our party on November 7th to protect them here and abroad,” the letter said. “We believe she is supremely qualified for the job.”

The decision is Pelosi’s to make; the head of the Intelligence Committee is chosen by the Speaker. But the Hastings case is not just a problem for Pelosi. It could present an agonizing choice for other Democrats who were in the House in 1988 and went on the record in favor of Hastings’s impeachment. If they support Hastings, they will likely feel some pressure to explain why they once believed him unfit for office but now feel he is the right choice to occupy such a critical position.

The pressure might be particularly acute for Conyers, who not only voted for Hastings’s impeachment but also chaired the House Judiciary subcommittee that investigated the case, co-sponsored the impeachment resolution, and argued for Hastings’s conviction as an impeachment manager in the Senate trial. As such, Conyers left a long record explaining his belief that Hastings was guilty.

“No one could have been more skeptical than I at the start of this process,” Conyers told the Senate during the trial. “No one more anxious to ensure that this man be neither penalized for his race or insulated by his race, from the consequences of wrongful conduct. No one was more predisposed to believe the best of Judge Hastings and his case and to doubt his accusers. I said so.”

But as chairman of the subcommittee, Conyers continued, he examined the evidence that Hastings conspired with a close friend, a man named William Borders, to solicit money from defendants in return for favorable treatment in Hastings’s court. And that evidence changed Conyers’s mind. “I heard some evidence that forced me to reevaluate my position, the evidence presented, not only in my subcommittee but over here as a manager,” Conyers said. “I have heard this thing twice. And what I have seen and heard and studied and listened to and reread and argued with my staff counsel and back and forth has only matured my conclusion that, measured by any standard, Judge Hastings’ guilt has been established and Congress has an obligation to protect the integrity of the judiciary.”

“There is an enormous amount of evidence that makes no sense at all unless Judge Hastings conspired with William Borders and lied at the trial,” Conyers concluded. “It is the mass of evidence that makes the case, but it may be just one of the undisputed facts that convinces you that Judge Hastings is not to be believed on this and many, many other facts made both in and outside of this legal process.”

“Justice and the integrity of our government depend on the importance of these impeachment proceedings, and they argue that the judge should be removed from the bench.”
 

http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=ZGZjNDljZDkwNjEwNjNhYWNkMWViOWVkNDJiZDQ0ZGI=
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

sirs

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Re: In ‘88, Pelosi Voted to Impeach Hastings —
« Reply #1 on: November 23, 2006, 01:37:52 AM »
I suppose hypocrisy has no limits on the left
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

sirs

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Re: In ‘88, Pelosi Voted to Impeach Hastings —
« Reply #2 on: November 27, 2006, 03:45:18 AM »
Hastings Flap Confirms Pelosi's Problems as Leader, Analyst Says
By Randy Hall
CNSNews.com Staff Writer/Editor
November 22, 2006


(CNSNews.com) - A growing controversy over a looming House intelligence committee chairmanship appointment is adding to the problems Speaker-elect Nancy Pelosi faces as leader of the House Democrats, according to a conservative analyst.

Pelosi's promise that this would be "the most honest, the most open and the most ethical Congress in history" "made a good sound bite, but actually putting it into practice is a lot harder," Dani Doane, director of House relations for the conservative Heritage Foundation, told Cybercast News Service Wednesday.

She was referring to the possibility that Pelosi will name as chair of the crucial committee a lawmaker who was removed as a federal judge in 1989 due to a bribery scandal.

Four years after he was appointed a federal judge in Florida in 1979, Alcee Hastings was acquitted of charges of conspiring with a close friend, William Borders, to solicit a $150,000 bribe from defendants in a racketeering case.

Although he had been cleared legally, the U.S. House of Representatives in 1988 conducted an impeachment hearing, and Hastings the following year became the sixth federal judge to be removed from office.

In 1992, he was elected to Congress as a representative of Florida.

The liberal watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington this week posted documents pertaining to Hastings' impeachment on its website, although a spokesman told Cybercast News Service that did not mean the organization was "taking a position" on the Hastings controversy.

According to those documents, Rep. John Conyers noted during the impeachment proceedings: "There is an enormous amount of evidence that makes no sense at all unless Judge Hastings conspired with William Borders and lied at the trial.

"Justice and the integrity of our government depend on the importance of these impeachment proceedings, and they argue that the judge should be removed from the bench," the Michigan Democrat added.

On Aug. 3, 1988, the House of Representatives voted 413 to 3 to adopt articles of impeachment against the judge. One of those who voted against Hastings was a new congresswoman from California, Nancy Pelosi.

Then on Oct. 20, 1989, the Senate voted 69 to 26 to remove him from office.

Three years later, Hastings was elected to the House, where he has served as a member of the chamber's intelligence committee.

Hastings' background drew criticism from Tom Fitton, president of the conservative group Judicial Watch, who last week sent a letter to Pelosi urging her not to promote him.

The Hastings controversy comes just one week after Pelosi placed herself in what pundits called "a lose-lose situation" by supporting as the new House majority leader Rep. John Murtha, a Pennsylvania Democrat known for his criticism of the war in Iraq and a murky ethical past.

Rep. Steny Hoyer subsequently defeated Murtha by a vote of 149 to 86, despite Pelosi's efforts, which included nominating Murtha herself during a Nov. 16 Democratic Caucus meeting.

"With the Murtha situation, I was shocked that Nancy Pelosi would put herself in the position to have a huge embarrassment coming out of the gate, and this is another indication of ethical concerns," Doane said. "But that's almost a subplot to the quick collapse of Democratic unity and goals while getting caught in infighting.

"My understanding is that Pelosi really doesn't want Hastings [as intelligence committee chair]," Doane said. "She likes him, but she understands the liability and sees that this would put a big target on her back."

Because of this, Doane said, Pelosi floated as an alternative the name of Rep. Silvestre Reyes of Texas "so she could have an outreach to the Hispanic caucus."

However, the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) had other plans and is pushing for Hastings, who is African American, to be appointed.

"The CBC is saying they want Hastings in," Doane observed. "More than the situation as to whether or not this is an ethical Congress, this points to the problems Nancy Pelosi is going to have in being a leader."

The speaker-elect has "four or five distinct groups within the majority she's got to worry about," Doane added. "Trying to keep them all working together and in line yet maintaining their objectives is going to be interesting to watch."

Doane offered what she said was the "perfect solution" to the controversy: Pelosi should name Rep. Jane Harman of California, currently the committee's ranking Democrat, as the new chairman.

"Pelosi has said continually that she will not put Harman in because of her [moderate] stance on the Iraq war," Doane noted. "Just because she's liked by Republicans doesn't mean she should necessarily be out of the running.

"It does seem pretty suspect to me that Pelosi won't take a qualified candidate who's not going to either open the party to international scorn or anger one of the key groups within the Democratic caucus, the CBC," she said. "The perfect solution is staring her in the face, and she won't take it."


http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewPolitics.asp?Page=/Politics/archive/200611/POL20061122b.html
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Plane

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Re: In ‘88, Pelosi Voted to Impeach Hastings —
« Reply #3 on: November 27, 2006, 06:33:28 PM »
Culture of corruption


Repeat above phrase , many many times , act as if you can back it up with a better record for your own party , and keep a straight face.


Keep this up long enough and you can retake the House, that seems to be the way it is done.