Restoring Justice, Step by Step

On Monday, Eric Holder was confirmed as Attorney General. Big news … and good news for Americans who depend on the Justice Department to defend their rights. A bit more under the radar, Monday also saw another important piece of news at the DOJ. Leslie Hagen, a Justice Department attorney who was fired by Monica Goodling because of rumors that she was a lesbian, was rehired to her previous job at the Department.

This is just one step in cleaning up the appalling mess at the DOJ left by egregious politicization during the Bush administration. Monica Goodling, senior counsel to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, was by all objective standards unqualified for such a high post. Her only “qualifications” — the only ones that mattered in the Gonzales DOJ — were that she was a partisan ideologue who graduated from Pat Robertson’s Regent University Law School and was committed to reshaping the Justice Department to operate on a right-wing agenda.

Even though the politicization of the DOJ under President Bush was shameful (and possibly criminal), some senators apparently think it should continue and are taking their marching orders from the Radical Right. The next targets of their witch hunt? Three more of the president’s eminently qualified DOJ nominees: David Ogden, Thomas Perrelli and Dawn Johnsen.

Dawn Johnson, for example, has been tapped to head the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) — the office that, under the Bush administration, produced the memos that served as its guidelines for detainee treatment and executive overreaching. Johnsen has been a harsh critic of the Bush administration’s legal justifications for its policies. And, in her extremely impressive legal career, she spent several years at NARAL Pro-Choice America. Already some senators like Jeff Sessions of Alabama — who earlier this week assailed the Johnsen nomination on the Senate floor — are suggesting that, in their view, pro-choice bona fides should be an instant disqualifier.

Quickly confirming the rest of President Obama’s Justice Department team will be one more important step, but there’s still much more to be done to repair what was so damaged during the Bush years.

Let’s look back at just a few of the disasters born out of DOJ’s right-wing politicization:

  • political firings of U.S. attorneys;
  • political firings of staff attorneys, especially in the Civil Rights Division;
  • refusal to properly enforce civil rights laws, particularly those protecting voting rights;
  • Department approval and justification of unconstitutional policies from warrantless domestic spying to the denial of habeas corpus and torture.

People For the American Way will be pushing for investigations into these wrongdoings. I know how important this issue is to our activists — you’ve pitched in time and again over the last eight years as we’ve pushed for accountability and the rule of law at the DOJ, and hundreds of you wrote me impassioned emails last week about just how critical it is to keep pushing.

Karl Rove and others who are subpoenaed to testify or provide documents must comply and cooperate not just with Justice Department probes into these matters, but also with any and all congressional investigations. Congressional action is what’s needed to get to the bottom of what happened, hold those responsible accountable and prevent similar abuses of power from happening in the future.

Making sure investigations happen and proceed effectively and making sure President Obama’s other Justice Department nominees are confirmed smoothly are just two things we’ll be working hard for in the coming weeks, and there will be much more.

I’d also like to take a moment to ackowledge Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg who is in the hospital recovering from surgery. She’s a true defender of our constitutional values and I know you’ll join me and the rest of the staff of People For in wishing her a speedy recovery.

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American Way, Attorney General, Bush Administration, choice, civil rights, david ogden, Dawn Johnsen, Emails, Eric Holder, Habeas Corpus, Jeff Sessions, Justice Department, Karl Rove, Legal, NARAL, Office of Legal Counsel, Pat Robertson, people for the american way, radical right, Regent University, Rule of Law, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, senate, Supreme Court, Thomas Perrelli, torture, Voting, voting rights