The current Attorney General of the United States, Eric
Holder, is an unabashed advocate of pro-black racial preference who does not
include whites or Asian-Americans when he refers to "my people" – i.e., those particular Americans whose interests
he most aggressively asserts and defends in his leadership of the Justice
Department.
Holder
has announced his resignation (effective upon confirmation of a replacement),
and President Obama has just nominated another black-leftist attorney, Loretta
Lynch of New York City, to succeed and emulate Holder. Obama plainly expects Ms. Lynch to continue
Holder's administration of federal law enforcement with an emphatic bias
towards the interests of black Americans under the divisive doctrines of
affirmative action, disparate impact, and 21st century reparations
for the racial wrongs of the nineteenth century.
Although
Ms. Lynch's embrace of Holder's race-based agenda is cosmetically muted under
the guise of her relatively non-controversial tenure as United States Attorney
in New York City, no one should be deceived by this disingenuous political
camouflage. Lynch has the strong backing
and endorsement of not only the tendentious Mr. Holder, but also the
ultra-radical racial agitator, Al Sharpton, who was directly engaged in the political
consultations leading to Lynch's selection.
In
the wake of his overwhelming rejection in the just concluded congressional
elections, Obama has rejected any notion of conciliation or compromise, but has
instead decided to "double-down" in pushing ahead with the very
policies and plans that the electorate so emphatically refuted. There is little reason to believe that Obama
would deviate from his unapologetic recalcitrance in choosing a moderate or
conciliatory nominee for Attorney General.
On the contrary, it is evident that he is in comfortable accord with the
confrontational attitudes of Holder, Sharpton, and others of their ilk in his
choice of a suitable leftist to administer U.S. law enforcement for the final
two years of his destructive administration.
The
Obama administration hopes to avoid detailed scrutiny of Ms. Lynch's background
and legal philosophy by portraying her as an entirely respectable,
"non-controversial" choice who should be quickly confirmed in the
forthcoming "lame duck" session of Congress, while Obama's Democrats
still cling to control of the Senate and its Judiciary Committee. Obama and Holder know that if they cannot
rush Ms. Lynch through an abbreviated and pro forma confirmation process in the
lame duck Senate, a serious and intensive confirmation process awaits her when
the Republicans assert control of the Senate in January, 2015.
Obama's
media allies, Democratic senators, and at least one "useful idiot" on
the Republican side have already begun painting Ms. Lynch with the false colors
of respectability, with a view to forcing a speedy and ill-informed "Kumbaya
confirmation." Various news stories
have already described Lynch, without
providing any supporting evidence, as a "popular prosecutor" who has
"built a solid reputation" during her tenure as U.S. Attorney for the
Easter District of New York. This is
feckless nonsense.
Federal
U.S. Attorneys are appointed by the President, and their largely bureaucratic
position rarely involves the kind of visibility or public engagement that makes
them either "popular" or unpopular.
There is thus no reason for describing Loretta Lynch as a "popular
prosecutor" other than to lend support to the Administration's
disingenuous efforts to portray her as moderate and respectable, when in fact
she has earned the support of racialist agitators like
Sharpton.
As
to Ms. Lynch's supposedly "solid reputation," there is no reason to
ascribe the slightest significance to this throw-away assertion. Although stories making this claim provide no
genuine evidence or data to support it, it is most likely based upon statements
of support from New York lawyers and political figures – people who have
everything to gain, and nothing to lose, by cultivating the approval or
gratitude of a powerful U.S. Attorney and her even more powerful backers in the
White House and at Main Justice. In
short, the ritualistic and boilerplate assertions of Ms. Lynch's purportedly
solid reputation as a "tough but fair" prosecutor are utterly
worthless.
The
critical issue is not whether Lynch has the pro
forma, self-interested support of New York lawyers and political figures,
but whether she is likely to continue the utterly disastrous and racially
divisive policies and practices of the Obama-Holder Justice Department. Among other things, her disturbing statements
endorsing Holder's race-based approach to law enforcement, and the suspect
circumstances of her selection – i.e., the apparent imprimatur of Holder and
Sharpton – indicates that she will adhere closely to the Holder Line if
confirmed as Attorney General. Indeed, Sharpton himself has stated, "I think Loretta Lynch certainly satisfies all of us that she will continue in the same vein that Eric Holder had began." - See more at: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/kyle-drennen/2014/11/10/nbc-hails-obamas-historic-choice-attorney-general-touts-sharpton#sthash.dk3WtrFX.dpuf
The
arguments made by Obama's media allies urging swift and submissive confirmation
of Ms. Lynch are beyond hilarious in their extreme absurdity and illogic. An article in the New Republic by a so-called "fellow" at the leftist Yale
Information Society Project named Sam Kleiner, for example, offers the
following conclusory incoherence: "The
Obama administration has extended an olive branch to the Senate Republicans by
choosing someone whose independence and apolitical judgment are beyond
reproach." See http://www.newrepublic.com/article/120214/attorney-general-loretta-lynch-republicans-question-obamas-pick.
"Beyond
reproach?" Who does he think he's
talking about, Caesar's wife?
Kleiner's
flippantly partisan article assumes that Lynch will somehow be
"independent" because, unlike several other persons mentioned as
possible nominees for Attorney General, she did not have "experience in
the White House or at Main Justice."
This illogical contention is patently flawed on several levels.
First,
countless leftist Democrats who "lack experience in the White House or at
Main Justice" would be perfectly ready and willing to dance on the puppet
strings of Obama and his White House gang if given the position of Attorney
General. The law firms and non-profit
legal groups of America are filled with senior liberal-Democrat attorneys who
would love nothing more than to slavishly implement the dictates of Obama,
Valerie Jarrett, and John Podesta if named Attorney General. An Attorney General's lack of inner circle
experience provides absolutely no assurance, or even any likelihood, of
so-called "independence" from the President's political policies and
directives. Indeed, Lynch's elevation
from the comparative obscurity of her pedestrian U.S. Attorney position to the
Corner Office at Main Justice renders her all the more likely to do the bidding
of those who elevated her.
Secondly,
Ms. Lynch in fact enjoyed extensive access to the Justice Department's inner
circles when Holder appointed her as the Chairwoman of the Attorney General's
Advisory Committee of U.S. Attorneys, which advises the Attorney General on
legal policy issues. So not only does Lynch,
contrary to Kleiner's misleading assertions, have high-level experience at Main
Justice; she is also heavily beholden and linked to Attorney General
Holder. More importantly, it is apparent
that she has been advising him on the very divisive and unconstitutional
policies which have made Holder a national byword for lawlessness in the
Attorney General's office. To promptly
confirm a known disciple of the man whose reckless and discriminatory policies
have made him anathema to the American public – Holder's approval rating as
Attorney General is a pathetic 24%
according to a Rasmussen poll – would be a betrayal of both the Constitution,
the rule of law, and the expressed wishes of the voters who emphatically
rejected Obama's policies in the recent elections.
Notwithstanding
all this, Democrat and media partisans, and at least one Republican political Quisling,
have been calling for the rubber-stamp confirmation of Ms. Lynch in the forthcoming
lame duck session of the Senate.
Inasmuch as the lame duck Senate was just unceremoniously repudiated by
the electorate, however, elementary notions of responsive and prudent
government would place the responsibility for evaluating the suitability of
such an important nomination upon the accountable new Senate, rather than the unaccountable
old one.
Almost
on cue, however, the invertebrate Republican senator from South Carolina, Lindsey
Graham, blurted out a signal of premature surrender on the Lynch nomination
even before the ink was dry on her nomination papers. With as much sober consideration as a teenage
girl squealing "OMG, awesome," on seeing a new star on "The
Voice," Graham reportedly volunteered that Lynch "seems to be a solid
choice," is qualified to be Attorney General, and that he has no problems
with confirming her in the abbreviated lame duck session.
Graham's
irresponsible remarks confirm once again why the routine re-election of
unprincipled appeasement-oriented incumbents like him makes meaningful
conservative reform in Congress so difficult.
There is absolutely no valid
reason for a Republican senator to preemptively concede the confirmation of
a suspect Obama nominee for a crucial post like Attorney General before the
review of her background has even begun,
let alone before the Judiciary Committee has conducted thorough hearings on the
nomination. Graham is evidently so
anxious to curry favor with the liberal media and political establishment – now
that he is safely re-elected and beyond the reach of insurgent conservatives –
that he is willing to preempt the scrutiny that is required for any important cabinet nominees, let
alone one who promises to perpetuate the destructive policies of an Eric Holder,
with the smiling approval of Al Sharpton.
Those
who advocate a quick, pro forma
confirmation of Ms. Lynch insist that she is indisputably well-qualified to be
Attorney General solely because she has served as a relatively uncontroversial
U.S. Attorney for about six years. This
is pure nonsense. There are
approximately 93 U.S. Attorneys, and
it is a safe bet that most of them could be described as respectable,
"well-regarded," and "tough but fair" – the same
meaningless endorsements bestowed upon Ms. Lynch by the same beholden
attorneys, colleagues, and fellow Harvard Law School Network cronies who would
bestow them on almost any U.S. Attorney in their incestuous professional and
political circle.
None
of these boilerplate encomiums provide any meaningful evidence that a given
U.S. Attorney is qualified to be Attorney General – especially at a time when
the tyrannical conduct of the President and the current Attorney General have
undermined the integrity of constitutional governance and the rule of law.
Having
served as a senior Senate Judiciary Committee Counsel during the Reagan and
Bush 41 years, SR is deeply familiar with the Senate's vetting and confirmation
process for Presidential nominees. The
vetting of U.S. Attorneys is generally cursory and pro forma, owing to the fact that these officials are generally
confined to straightforward legal enforcement operations, rather than matters
of politics, policy, or sensitive constitutional interpretation. Thus, the fact that Ms. Lynch has twice been
confirmed as a U.S.A. without controversy says very little about her ability to
satisfy the quite different and far more exacting standards that apply to the
confirmation of an Attorney General.
A
close, skeptical, and thorough vetting of the Lynch nomination is even more
critical than usual because the Obama Administration, aided and abetted by the
Holder Justice Department, has flouted and undermined the U.S. Constitution
with a hubris unmatched in modern history.
In particular, Obama has flagrantly usurped and violated the legislative
power expressly assigned to Congress in Art. I of the Constitution; he has both
declined to enforce or defend duly enacted laws, even while purporting to
impose laws and amendments to laws that Congress never enacted. A prime example, of course, is Obama's
arrogant insistence that he will unilaterally alter U.S. law to
"legalize" the status of millions of illegal aliens, in direct
contravention of the laws passed by Congress.
Given
these realities, it is imperative that the next Attorney General have a strong
mastery of constitutional law, and a commitment to defending the Constitution's
integrity even when the President's policies and politics press in the other
direction.
There
is no indication in Ms. Lynch's unremarkable experience as a U.S. Attorney that
she has dealt extensively with difficult issues of constitutional law, let
alone seminal separation of powers issues like that posed by Obama's proposed usurpation of congressional authority over immigration and deportation. Perhaps she does possess a level of
constitutional mastery that is not evident on the face of her credentials, but
that can only be determined by a thorough vetting of her background and probing
interrogation in a full hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Such a hearing must also require Ms. Lynch to
declare whether she supports the constitutionality of Obama's proposed
unilateral amnesty fiat, as Senators Cruz and Lee have properly insisted.
Finally,
the Lynch advocates' ultimate trump card is to gush breathlessly that she would
be the first black woman Attorney General, and that only racist Republicans
would oppose such an inspirational breakthrough by denying her instantaneous
confirmation by the lame duck Senate. This
tiresome exploitation of vestigial white-male guilt provides no rational basis
whatsoever for according preferential treatment to black female nominees; it is
nothing more than an argument for pro-black and pro-female discrimination in the
guise of obsolete racial and gender justice platitudes.
We
have now had a black Attorney General (Mr.Holder) for nearly six years (early 2009
to the present). We recently had a woman
Attorney General, Janet Reno, for eight years (1993-2001), and an Hispanic AG
for three years (2005-2007). In short, a racial minority or a woman has
served as Attorney General during 17 of the past 22 years.
Under these circumstances, the appointment of a black
female to this post hardly constitutes some kind of novel or historical
breakthrough for blacks or for women. This
is especially apparent at a time when a black President is already surrounded
by a powerful coterie of influential black women such as primary Presidential
Counselor Valerie Jarrett, National Security Adviser Susan Rice, and the
increasingly political First Lady, Michelle Obama. Against this revealing reality – which most
people in politics or media are too timid to notice, let alone mention – the appointment
of yet another black woman to the President's inner circle of power represents
a reinforcement of the status quo, rather than a vindication for the
underrepresented.
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