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Pardon me? The Bush administration defends Clinton. (Citings).


JUDICIAL WATCH, A gadfly gadfly, name for various biting flies, especially those that attack livestock, e.g., the botfly and the horsefly.  legal organization founded by the colorful Larry Klayman Larry Klayman is the founder and chief representative of the Klayman Law Firm, which is based out of Miami, Florida and Washington D.C., although he is known chiefly as the founder and former Chairman of Judicial Watch, a public interest and non-profit law firm, which attained , became famous for hounding former President Bill Clinton with lawsuit after lawsuit. Written off by Clintonistas as part of the vast right-wing conspiracy "Vast right-wing conspiracy" was a phrase used by First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton in 1998 in defense of her husband President Bill Clinton and his administration during the Lewinsky scandal, characterizing the Lewinsky charges as the latest in a long, organized, collaborative , Klayman and his group are now proving to be equal-opportunity burrs in the side of presidential authority. They haven't settled down just because their old foe is gone.

The Bush administration is fighting Judicial Watch's lawsuit to open records and documents held by the Justice Department relating to relating to relate prepconcernant

relating to relate prepbezüglich +gen, mit Bezug auf +acc 
 the 177 pardons Clinton executed on his very last day in office. The White House wants to keep those records closed, not so much to do Clinton a favor as to protect the current administration's right to impenetrable secrecy.

The Bush administration, like the one before it, has shown a general unwillingness to fork over to hand or pay over, as money; to cough up.
- G. Eliot.

See also: Fork
 papers, pulling down shades of Noun 1. shades of - something that reminds you of someone or something; "aren't there shades of 1948 here?"
reminder - an experience that causes you to remember something
 privilege and secrecy whenever it can. The Clinton pardon papers aren't the only ones the Justice Department has protected: It is also refusing to open the 1927 pardon records of "Back to Africa" leader Marcus Garvey.

Presidents don't actually have to claim executive privilege executive privilege, exemption of the executive branch of government, or its officers, from having to give evidence, specifically, in U.S. law, the exemption of the president from disclosing information to congressional inquiries or the judiciary.  to keep documents closed to the public. In the Judicial Watch case, Assistant Attorney General Robert D. McCallum has invoked "presidential communications privilege" to shield the documents. But according to judicial Watch, no such privilege should apply to communications that aren't directly connected to the White House. Many of the documents relating to a pardon, such as attorney's memos, don't actually cross the president's desk.

Whatever the merits, it's unlikely that Judicial Watch will win its case, according to Paul Rosenzweig, a senior legal research fellow at the Heritage Foundation. Courts almost never overturn presidential claims to privilege in civil suits, he says. Though the Clinton administration did lose some executive privilege claims, they all involved criminal cases.

"The pardon power is pretty close to the core of executive privilege," says Rosenzweig. "It is an unreviewable decision by the president to exercise executive grace."

But it is that very finality, argues Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton, that makes greater transparency so vital.
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Title Annotation:former president Bill Clinton's to keep his records closed supported by President George W. Bush
Author:Doherty, Brian
Publication:Reason
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2003
Words:349
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