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A conservative for impeachment.


Bruce Fein reminds me of Jerry Lewis playing Professor Julius Kelp kelp: see seaweed; Phaeophyta.
kelp

Any of about 30 genera of large seaweeds that make up the order Laminariales (brown algae), found in colder seas.
 in the 1963 comedy classic The Nutty Professor. Intellectually astute and quick-witted, Fein, like Lewis as Kelp, is underestimated because of his peculiar style.

But the stakes are too high to dismiss Fein simply for being didactic or eccentric. In fact, he's breaking conservative rank to defend our Constitution.

Fein has a solid Republican resume. He served as an associate deputy attorney general in the Reagan Administration, where he helped formulate conservative arguments on key legal issues that are still current today. He had stints as a resident scholar at the Heritage Foundation and an adjunct scholar at the American Enterprise Institute The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research (AEI) is a conservative think tank, founded in 1943. According to the institute its mission "to defend the principles and improve the institutions of American freedom and democratic capitalism — limited government, . He also writes a regular column for The Washington Times newspaper, one of the country's leading conservative dailies.

But his bona tides don't end there.

He has trashed the Roe v. Wade Roe v. Wade, case decided in 1973 by the U.S. Supreme Court. Along with Doe v. Bolton, this decision legalized abortion in the first trimester of pregnancy.  abortion decision, stating that it required a "hallucinogenic hal·lu·ci·no·gen  
n.
A substance that induces hallucination.



[hallucin(ation) + -gen.]


hal·lu
 intellectual flight" on the part of Justice Harry Blackmun to draft the opinion. "President George W. Bush should pack the United States Supreme Court United States Supreme Court: see Supreme Court, United States.  with philosophical clones of Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas and defeated nominee Robert H. Bork," he wrote in Washington Lawyer in February 2005. He voted for Bush in 2000 and 2004, and he applauded the nomination of John Roberts as Bush's "finest hour."

So why has Fein been collaborating with the ACLU ACLU: see American Civil Liberties Union.  and providing damning testimony to the Senate about President Bush? Why is he for censuring the President and even, perhaps, impeaching him?

This is what did it: The disclosure that the National Security Agency (NSA NSA
abbr.
National Security Agency

Noun 1. NSA - the United States cryptologic organization that coordinates and directs highly specialized activities to protect United States information systems and to produce foreign
) is engaged in the domestic wiretapping A form of eavesdropping involving physical connection to the communications channels to breach the confidentiality of communications. For example, many poorly-secured buildings have unprotected telephone wiring closets where intruders may connect unauthorized wires to listen in on phone  of American citizens in the United States without first obtaining warrants. The Bush Administration had crossed the line. Within twenty-four hours, Fein went into constitutional combat mode. And he hasn't stopped since.

For Fein, there is nothing really to debate; the law is settled. In 1978, Congress passed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA Noun 1. FISA - an act passed by Congress in 1978 to establish procedures for requesting judicial authorization for foreign intelligence surveillance and to create the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court; intended to increase United States counterintelligence; , permitting the government to conduct electronic surveillance on citizens in the United States if it first gets a warrant from the FISA court, which exists for that reason only. The FISA court rarely has denied such a request.

But the NSA has repeatedly conducted such surveillance without going to the FISA court for warrants. Every forty-five days, President Bush has been issuing Executive Orders saying that it is within his authority to bypass the FISA court. And he says he'll keep doing so.

"There is not a single Supreme Court case that insinuates that the President can violate a federal statute in order to gather foreign intelligence," Fein tells me. "It was a flagrant violation of the Constitution, which I feel that citizens as well as the government have a duty to defend."

Fein cites the 1952 Supreme Court case of Youngstown Sheet & Tube v. Sawyer as support for the proposition that the President does not have "inherent authority" to bypass legislative enactments of Congress in a time of war.

In the Youngstown case, President Harry Truman cited his "inherent authority" and attempted to seize a steel mill during the war in Korea. The court mashed him back.

FISA, according to Fein, also reins in the President because it has never been overturned or held unconstitutional. It is the law, according to Fein, and if it can be disobeyed, why is the FISA court still in operation today?

"The warrantless surveillance program," Fein stated before the Senate Judiciary Committee The U.S. Senate established the Committee on the Judiciary on December 10, 1816, as one of the original 11 standing committees. It is also one of the most powerful committees in Congress; among its wide range of jurisdictions is investigation of federal judicial nominees and oversight of  back on March 31, "justifies censure." He testified that the President is "seeking to cripple the Constitution's checks and balances" by bypassing the FISA court. And Fein said that Bush's rationales "would reduce Congress to an inkblot in the permanent conflict with international terrorism. The President could pick and choose which statutes to obey in gathering foreign intelligence and employing battlefield tactics on the sidewalks of the United States." Fein denounced "President Bush's contempt for the rule of law and constitutional limitations."

On August 17, federal Judge Anna Diggs Taylor Anna Diggs Taylor (born Anna Katherine Johnston, 1932, Washington, D.C.) is a United States District Court judge in Detroit, Michigan. She graduated from Barnard College in 1954 and Yale Law School in 1957, and worked in the Office of Solicitor for the United States Department of  issued a strong ruling against the surveillance program. The verdict came under attack from a number of Republicans for being too harsh on the Bush Administration. Not from Fein, though. In an August 29 op-ed in The Washington Times, he said Taylor "too weakly condemned" the program, which he deemed as "flagrantly illegal."

Strong words. But he had even stronger ones when he testified to the Senate on June 27 about President Bush's signing statements--more than 750 of them, according to The Boston Globe. These are, in effect, asterisks that the President places next to his name when he signs a bill into law. As Fein explained, under the Constitution, the President has only two choices: Sign a bill and see that the law is properly executed, or veto the bill. But time and again, President Bush has added a signing statement that says he will enforce the law only to the extent that it doesn't interfere with his duties as commander in chief or his power as the unitary executive or his interpretation of the Constitution.

Noting that President Bush's signing statements "have multiplied logarithmically," Fein testified that they "flout the Constitution's checks and balances and separation of powers separation of powers: see Constitution of the United States.
separation of powers

Division of the legislative, executive, and judicial functions of government among separate and independent bodies.
. They usurp legislative prerogatives and evade accountability." Fein said they amount to an impermissible line-item veto.

"If all other avenues have proved unavailing," Fein testified, "Congress should contemplate impeachment impeachment, formal accusation issued by a legislature against a public official charged with crime or other serious misconduct. In a looser sense the term is sometimes applied also to the trial by the legislature that may follow. .... The epitome of an impeachable im·peach·a·ble  
adj.
1. Capable of being impeached: venal, impeachable public servants.

2. Being such as to warrant impeachment: an impeachable offense.
 offense, as Alexander Hamilton amplified in the Federalist Papers, is a political crime against the Constitution."

Fein believes that President Bush is engaging in a power grab of the gravest dimension. "The Republic is withering in foolish imitation of Rome," Fein wrote in The Washington Times after Congress approved the Military Commissions Act.

When I ask Fein if he has received any serious flak from other conservatives for his sustained criticism, he admits some of his ideological homies This article is about a toy series. For the slang usage, see Homie.

Homies are a series of 2-inch figurines loosely based upon Chicano (Mexican American) characters in the life of artist David Gonzales.
 are perturbed per·turb  
tr.v. per·turbed, per·turb·ing, per·turbs
1. To disturb greatly; make uneasy or anxious.

2. To throw into great confusion.

3.
.

"To sort of borrow a phrase from President Clinton," Fein says laughing, "it depends upon what the meaning of the word 'flak' is."

Illustration by Sako Shahinian

Brian Gilmore is a poet, lawyer, and author of "Jungle Nights and Soda Fountain Rags: Poem for Duke Ellington."
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Author:Gilmore, Brian
Publication:The Progressive
Date:Dec 1, 2006
Words:1025
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