Bye-Bye Cheney
February 20, 2003
Republican Appropriations Committee Chair Forces GAO To Drop Its Case Against Cheney

It's like a triple-layer conflict of interest layer cake. I don't know what's more exciting -- finding out how much Cheney knew about Enron and/or the California Energy scam or seeing just how far he and the Republican party will go so that he can remain above the law in order to cover it up.

If there's nothing to cover up: cough up the documents. No terrorist connection here buddy -- this is domestic policy at its core. (Remember that? Domestic policy?)

Too bad the GAO couldn't stick it out with its case. I knew it was too good to be true that it had kept the pressure on this long.

GOP threats halted GAO Cheney suit
By Peter Brand and Alexander Bolton for The Hill


Threats by Republicans to cut the General Accounting Office (GAO) budget influenced its decision to abandon a lawsuit against Vice President Dick Cheney, The Hill has learned.

Sources familiar with high-level discussions at the GAO said Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), chairman of the Appropriations Committee, met with GAO Comptroller General David Walker earlier this year and “unambiguously” pressured him to drop the suit or face cuts in his $440 million budget.

Here is the full text of the article in case the link goes bad:

http://www.thehill.com/news/021903/cheney.aspx


IN THIS ISSUE Thursday February 20, 2003

FEBRUARY 19, 2003

GOP threats halted GAO Cheney suit
By Peter Brand and Alexander Bolton

Threats by Republicans to cut the General Accounting Office (GAO) budget influenced its decision to abandon a lawsuit against Vice President Dick Cheney, The Hill has learned.

Sources familiar with high-level discussions at the GAO said Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), chairman of the Appropriations Committee, met with GAO Comptroller General David Walker earlier this year and “unambiguously” pressured him to drop the suit or face cuts in his $440 million budget.

Walker yesterday acknowledged meeting Stevens, but denied the senator threatened to cut funding for the investigative agency. However, he confirmed that such threats were made, although he said they came from a lawmaker not “in a position to deliver” on them and did not occur recently.
PATRICK RYAN
Vice President Dick Cheney

The decision to drop the lawsuit has raised concerns that Congress’s all-purpose auditor has sacrificed its traditional role as an independent arm of Congress.

“ I met with Stevens in his capacity of president pro tempore,” the comptroller said: “In the conversation with Sen. Stevens there was no assertion or inference [of funding cuts]. He didn’t even raise the issue of appropriations.”

Walker did say, however, that several lawmakers have threatened in the past year to cut agency funding if it persisted with the controversial lawsuit. He also said the budget threat was among a number of factors that tipped his Feb. 7 decision to halt litigation.

A GAO staff member and several Stevens’s aides attended the meeting.

Stevens’s offices were closed at press time and neither the senator nor his spokeswoman could be reached for comment.

The controversy with Cheney came to a head in December after U.S. District Court Judge John Bates, citing separation of powers, ruled that Walker lacked sufficient grounds to compel Cheney to disclose the records of a White House energy task force that he had headed.

Walker had filed the suit against Cheney in February 2002 at the request of House Democrats. This was the first time in its 81-year history that the GAO, acting in its capacity as the investigative arm of Congress, sued the executive branch to obtain withheld information.

Walker said he initiated all the meetings on Capitol Hill and “I did what I thought was right.”

Before deciding not to appeal Bates’s decision, Walker said he met senior Republicans and Democrats in both chambers, and most lawmakers of them urged him not to pursue the matter. He said, “I considered all the facts and circumstances and am very comfortable with my decision.”

But several House Democratic leaders and key members of the Democratic Caucus have stringently criticized Walker’s decision.

“ I thought it was a bad decision,” said Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), the ranking Democrat on the Government Reform Committee, who along with Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.), the senior Democrat on the Energy and Commerce Committee, pressed Walker to file the suit last year.

“ If you have a GOP Congress not interested in exercising the role of oversight, and GAO doesn’t act independently of the Congress, there is nobody providing the job of checks and balances called for in our Constitution,” said Waxman. “This jeopardizes GAO’s ability to act independently in the future.”

Bates, who was nominated to the bench by the current president, ruled against the GAO because “neither a house of Congress nor any congressional committee has issued a subpoena for the disputed information.”

By not appealing this ruling, House Democrats argue, GAO will not be able to pursue sensitive information in the future without permission from the majority party.

House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) said Walker’s decision was a “very unfortunate undermining of GAO’s independence and effectiveness.”

Rep. Bob Matsui (D-Calif.), chair of the House Democrats’ campaign committee, said, “This not only undermines the independence of the GAO, but it also makes it difficult to get information.”

“ With the congressional committees controlled by the Republicans, I think it’s unlikely you’ll see GAO pursue something adversarial, and that’s a problem,” Matsui added. Matsui said he believed that Walker probably faced political pressure to drop the lawsuit.

On the floor of the House last Wednesday, Waxman condemned Walker’s decision.

“GAO will be able to continue [its] routine work. And if a Republican controlled committee ever urges GAO to pursue a controversial investigation of the Bush administration, GAO may be able to do this. But don’t hold your breath.”

Walker said that while Republican control of Congress and the White House makes GAO investigations more complicated, it wouldn’t affect his judgment. If the GAO is unable to obtain information from the executive branch, Walker said he would ask the appropriate committee of jurisdiction for a subpoena.

n response to allegations that the agency’s effectiveness would be diminished, Walker pointed to GAO’s annual report, which shows that the agency saved taxpayers $37.7 billion in return for its approximately $440 million budget.

Walker, a former aide to President Reagan who took office in November 1998, is serving a 15-year term.



Posted by Lisa at February 20, 2003 07:01 PM | TrackBack
Me A to Z (A Work In Progress)
Comments

Dear Lisa,
As a concerned citizen and a strong opponent of the Bush Administration,I am sick and tired of their reckless assaults on the environment. Despite numerous reports,facts and statistics from numerous members of the epa and capital hill Bush and Cheney seem to blatanly cover up everything. From weakening environmental laws and clean air standards, and opening up National forests for mining. No one can sit back anymore and let these atrocities happen at our expense. I urge everyone from lawmakers,scientists and politicians to continue to keep as much pressure on Bush and make him pay enormously for his disgraceful,heartless and pathetic behavior.

Posted by: Andrew Heydt on May 11, 2003 11:22 AM
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