The hypocrisy of Republican outrage over the DeLay prosecution

delayNYTimes.jpgIn reading the various Republican statements (see here and here) alleging that Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle is engaging in an outlandish abuse of power in regard to his decision to indict House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, a thought occurred to me.
For the past several years, the Justice Department under the Bush Administration has engaged in numerous and similar abuses of power. As a result, where is the Republican outrage over the sad cases of Daniel Bayly, William Fuhs, Arthur Andersen and Jamie Olis, to name just a few?
As I have noted many times, Sir Thomas More explains in the following passage from A Man for All Seasons why it is important to uphold the rule of law to constrain the abuse of overwhelming state power, even where doing so means that the Devil himself cannot be prosecuted unless he actually commits a crime:

“And when the last law was down, and the Devil turned ’round on you, where would you hide, Roper, the laws all being flat? This country is planted thick with laws, from coast to coast, Man’s laws, not God’s! And if you cut them down — and you’re just the man to do it, Roper! — do you really think you could stand upright in the winds that would blow then?”
“Yes, I’d give the Devil the benefit of law, for my own safety’s sake!”

The Bush Administration, Mr. DeLay and many of the Republicans who are criticizing Mr. Earle failed to uphold the rule of law in preventing prosecutions of business executives whose only “crime” was to be involved in arguably questionable business transactions that, at most, should have been the subject of civil litigation. Thus, the Republicans’ irresponsible sacrifice of these executives’ careers to the mantle of fickle public opinion has now contributed to the current environment where their own attempts to take advantage of loopholes in campaign finance laws is being criminalized.
Although abuse of state power against controversial politicians should not be condoned any more than abuse of state power against unpopular business executives, the Republicans’ criticism of the DeLay prosecution rings hollow. They should have listened to Sir Thomas.

Assessing the hurricane damage to Gulf production facilities

Typhoon4.jpgFollowing on this post from yesterday, the markets continued to react to more information that indicates that damage to Gulf of Mexico offshore production and drilling facilities from the recent hurricanes is going to reduce production and exploration from that key region for an extended period of time.
That information, combined with the slow process of restarting Gulf Coast refineries, is generating one of the more unusual political ironies that America has seen in some time. As a result of the restricted energy supplies from the Gulf region, the outspokenly pro-exploration and production Bush Administration is sounding eerily like the Carter Administration from the late 1970’s, promising a national energy-conservation campaign to give Americans tips on saving energy during the winter heating season.

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Langone unmasks the Lord of Regulation

langone.jpgspitzernew4.jpgYou remember Kenneth Langone, don’t you?
Mr. Langone is the co-founder of Home Depot who chaired the New York Stock Exchange compensation committee that approved Richard Grasso’s $140 million pay package. As a result, he is a defendant along with Mr. Grasso in New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer‘s lawsuit to recover alleged overcompensation paid by the NYSE to Mr. Grasso. As this previous post from over a year ago indicates, Mr. Langone does not think much of Mr. Spitzer’s lawsuit.
Well, in this delicious follow-up OpinionJournal op-ed, Mr. Langone updates us on Mr. Spitzer — who he calls “the full-time New York state attorney general and part-time fund-raiser for his political ambitions” — and his use of the high-profile lawsuit against Messrs. Grasso and Langone to promote his political career.

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An interesting perspective

Mineyard.jpgIt is becoming clearer each day now that at least a substantial amount of the initial information coming out of New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina was either exaggerated or misinformation. One such piece of misinformation was that large numbers of murders were occurring as a result of gunshots.
Commenting yesterday on the fact that only seven gunshot victims had been identified in the autopsies done on the first 650 or so bodies recovered from New Orleans, Coroner Frank Minyard made the following observation:

“Seven gunshots isn’t even a good Saturday night in New Orleans.”