The Impeachment of George W. Bush

MEDIA

Home / Preface / Buy This Book / Links / Events / Writings, Reviews and Interviews / About The Authors / Contact

TV/Radio----- Online / Blog----- Print


MSNBC's Dan Abrams Tags Rove 'Constitutional Crippler' Visit link for whole transcript

(Liz Holtzman responds to Abrams' remark:)

HOLTZMAN: Well, I agree with the last comment. I also want to say that what he did with the Justice Department, although we don't know the whole story yet because this is a man who's shown complete contempt not just for Congress, not showing up even after being subpoenaed, but contempt for the Constitution, which makes Congress an equal branch of government, and it allows it to examine how the executive branch is operating. But here you have a Justice Department that was perverted for political purposes. You had U.S. attorneys who were apparently, I mean, we don't know all the facts yet, but on the surface, it seems that U.S. attorneys were replaced because they didn't go after Democrats or they were removed because they went after Republicans.
I was a prosecutor, not only a congresswoman, and I never, before prosecuting a rapist or a murderer, said, well, are you a Republican or a Democrat? I'm going to go after you if you're one, not the other. I mean, that's not what our system of justice was. And Karl Rove took our government and tried to make it all political, including things that we think are pretty sacred, like justice that's fair and not partisan and not political, but that if you've committed a crime or you haven't committed a crime, you're going to be dealt with on the merits and not on the basis of politics. So I think his legacy has been a disaster for this country.


Swanson & Holtzman - Impeachment Debate on Hannity & Colmes 4/8/2007

Video: Impeachment on Fox News 12/15/06

Is There a Case for Impeachment? 95 minute MP3 Podcast Posted on Wednesday, March 22, 2006. Edited selections from a forum moderated by Sam Seder and featuring Representative John Conyers Jr., John Dean, Former Congresswoman Elizabeth Holtzman, Lewis Lapham, and Michael Ratner, held March 2, 2006 at Town Hall in New York City.

Former Watergate-Era Congresswoman Advocates Impeachment of Bush for Violations of U.S. Constitution - Interview with former U.S. Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman, D-N.Y., conducted by Scott Harris (Real Audio) (Streaming Video)

Deep Dish TV - Tribunal Video 14 minute highlights of the tribunal. highlights (QuickTime format) - (RealAudio format).

Bush Commission - Video View the first of the Bush Commission videos based on the testimony taken by the commission on torture and indefinite detention.


Online and BLOG

Judiciary Committee Should Move to Impeach Bush and Cheney Truthout 1/27/08

Elizabeth Holtzman on Impeaching George W. Bush TruthDig

LadyBroadoak Visionary Planetary Healing Tutorial: IMPEACHMENT ...

Gonzales: The Lawyer Who Lied to the Judge Andrew Cohen WashingtonPost.com 5/2/2007

The Raw Story Op-ed: Bush may retain 'drastically, weakened' Gonzales to avoid Watergate-like hearings 5/1/2007

Huffington Post 3/12/2007

George the Survivor: Democrats Settle for More
Posted by: lex on http://PEJ.org Thursday, 12/21/2006 - 08:55 PM

Ticia's Blog - Impeachment Watch: What About an Indictment?

Elizabeth Holtzman Calls for Impeachment-Bush and Cheney at a forum in Philadelphia, PA, 11/11/ 2006 - 9 minute YouTube video

Is There a Case for Impeachment? 95 minute MP3 Podcast Posted on Wednesday, March 22, 2006. Edited selections from a forum moderated by Sam Seder and featuring Representative John Conyers Jr., John Dean, Former Congresswoman Elizabeth Holtzman, Lewis Lapham, and Michael Ratner, held March 2, 2006 at Town Hall in New York City.

Huffington Post blog posted 9/26
Common Dreams, portside.org and truthout.org posted (Chicago Sun-Times article) 9/25
Truthdig interview 9/12 republished on National Review online also Buzzflash, Alternet)
Democrats.com 8/10

1. http://nevadathunder.com
2. http://www.veteransforamerica.org/index.cfm/Page/Article/ID/8024
3. buzzflash
4. http://right-thinking.com/index.php/weblog/comments/11951/
5. http://susiemadrak.com/index.php?s=Holtzman&submit=Search In a piece she wrote for today’s Chicago Sun-Times, former U.S. Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman (NY-D) points out what the media is missing:"
6. http://www.bushwatch.com/e-mail.htm
7.http://tailrank.com/posts/source/1688849860393576/lanternbrigade.blogspot.com
8. http://www.iran-daily.com/1385/2672/html/dotcoms.htm
9. http://guerillawomentn.blogspot.com/
10. http://www.btlonline.org/ (the website of "Between the Lines")
11. www.truthout.org/docs_2006/092706O.shtml
12. commondreams.org
13. portside.org
14. impeachpac.org/impeachment
15. the book is featured at impeachpac.org/impeachment-blogging?from=60
16. http://suzi106.wordpress.com/tag/politics/
17. http://www.madison.com/post/forum/rss.php
18. http://www.envirosagainstwar.org/know/read.php?&itemid=4683
19. logos -- homepage.mac.com/lpd/logos.html
20. http://www.democracyforcalifornia.com/blog/archives/001703.html
21. http://stellans.wordpress.com/tag/torture/
22. New Orleans Voices For Peace www.neworleansvfp.org/taxonomy/term/21/all
23. nomoreapples.blogspot.com/
24. nomoreapples.blogspot.com/
25.George Mason University's History News Network http://hnn.us/blogs/entries/30297.html
26. Democratic Daily blog.thedemocraticdaily.com/index.php?paged=2
27. Phillynews blog phillysnews.com/node/18441
28. http://www.opednews.com/
29. http://redstatemobile.com/node/11070
30. Out of Site http://rossini.ro.funpic.de/OOS.html
31. www.cursor.org : "Elizabeth Holtzman argues that President Bush "is quietly trying to pardon himself" in a move that has "Dirty War precedents," as "rights groups, military lawyers and legal scholars" denounce the Republican compromise on detainees, but there is still no word from the other party."
32. http://wordpress.com/tag/republicans/feed/
33. http://www.madplatonews.blogspot.com
34. http://www.nathancallahan.com/read.html
35. thecommonills.blogspot.com/atom.xml
36. navywxman.journalspace.com/
37. Bush Attempting to Pardon Himself For His War Crimes
If George Bush really believed his conduct was legal, he would not be so determined to make sure he could not be prosecuted for his conduct in office. Former New York Congresswoman Elizabeth Holtzman has an op-ed in The Chicago Sun Times in which she argues that for all practical purposes Bush has buried his own “pardon” for war crimes, similar to Gerald Ford’s pardon of Richard Nixon, in current legislationon the handling of detainees:
38. liberalvaluesblog.com/?cat=20
39. ansdada3.blogspot.com/
40. freespeechradio.net/
41. www.firedoglake.com/2006/09/28/damn-straight/
42. morningsomwhere.blogspot.com/
43. http://ar.wordpress.com/tag/war-crimes/
44. http://rebellenation.blogspot.com/
45. http://marcosolo.journalspace.com/?cat=9/11
46. Undernews -- prorev.com/indexa.htm - 301k
47. www.leftyblogs.com/pennsylvania/combined.html
48. http://iblogdis.wordpress.com/tag/disgrace/ Meat in Congressional Sandwich
September 24th, 2006
There is little question that Elizabeth Holtzman, a former New York congresswoman, is an authority on a how to impeach George W. Bush for so-concerned citizens. With Cynthia L. Cooper she is co-author of The Impeachment of George W. Bush: A Practical Guide for Concerned Citizens.
The meat, so to say, of her recent writing in the suntimes (Chicago, link below) is:
Avoiding prosecution under the War Crimes Act has been an obsession of this administration since shortly after 9/11. In a January 2002 memorandum to the president, then-White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales pointed out the problem of prosecution for detainee mistreatment under the War Crimes Act. He notes that given the vague language of the statute, no one could predict what future ‘’prosecutors and independent counsels'’ might do if they decided to bring charges under the act. As an author of the 1978 special prosecutor statute, I know that independent counsels (who used to be called ‘’special prosecutors'’ prior to the statute’s reauthorization in 1994) aren’t for low-level government officials such as CIA interrogators, but for the president and his Cabinet. It is clear that Gonzales was concerned about top administration officials.
The significance was not lost to Pamela Leavey @ democraticdaily who blogged: “Bush Seeks Immunity for Violating War Crimes Act - There have been few details released about what is really in the Bush “military tribunal” legislation, but we do know that it seeks to provide immunity from prosecution for war crimes for CIA interrogators. Ah, but here’s the caveat… that clause in the legislation would also protect Bush and no doubt that’s what’s been driving him to push this legislation, the desire to protect his own, morally bankrupt self.”
49. eschatonians.the-eleven.com/index.php?hours=168
50. http://inmyownway.blogspot.com

 

Print


Nixon-era pol pushes Bush impeachment

This article originally appeared at:
http://www.amny.com/news/local/am-impeach0730,0,5916556.story?coll=am-local-headlines
Visit AM New York online at http://www.amny.com

--------------------
By Justin Rocket Silverman, amNewYork Staff Writer
jsilverman@am-ny.com
July 30, 2007
Elizabeth Holtzman is the youngest woman ever elected to the U.S. Congress, and 33 years ago Monday she voted to impeach President Richard M. Nixon.
Later serving as the Brooklyn district attorney, she is the author of "The Impeachment of George W. Bush," and spoke to amNewYork about the similarities between Nixon's fall and the current president's troubles.
Is it really possible that Bush could be impeached?
As the American people become more and more aware that impeachment is the only way for the president to change his practices, support for it will go up.
Only about 20 percent of Americans supported Clinton's impeachment. The latest poll shows 54 percent support Bush being impeached.
That suggests a recognition on the part of many Americans that the president has abused his office and should be held accountable.
Isn't impeachment an extreme measure?
During Nixon's impeachment we felt it was a matter of preserving the democracy. More important than any single president or party is the preservation of the Constitution and the rule of law.
It's very sad, but I do believe that under the test of Constitution, Bush has committed impeachable offenses. Not a month goes by when there is not another parallel to Watergate.
House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers (D-Michigan) says that with the support of three more Congress members, he will start impeachment proceedings. But Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-California) says it is not on the table. Can it be done without her?
In 1973, Congress did not put impeachment on the table. The American people put it on the table. If the American people want to see President Bush removed from office, Congress will have to respond. That's why voters should contact their representatives to say they support impeachment.
--------------------

The 'I' word
Why a growing grassroots movement on the left wants to impeach the president -- and why Democrats in Washington don't even want to talk about it.

By Drake Bennett | June 24, 2007
FOR ELIZABETH HOLTZMAN it was the discovery, in late 2005, that the Bush administration had been monitoring Americans' phone and email conversations without warrants that convinced her that the President shouldn't be allowed to serve out the remainder of his term.
As a young congresswoman from New York, Holtzman, who now practices law in New York City, had served on the House Judiciary Committee that in 1974 adopted articles of impeachment against President Nixon. Among the charges, she points out, was that Nixon had overseen an illegal electronic surveillance program.
"Having participated in that," she says, "you don't forget it."
Today Holtzman is one of the leading voices in a small but energetic movement seeking to impeach not only President Bush but his vice president, Dick Cheney. In March, the Massachusetts Democratic Party joined 13 others, in states like California, Nevada, and New Hampshire, in passing a resolution in support of impeachment. The legislatures of nearly 80 towns and cities (most in Massachusetts, Vermont, and California) have passed similar resolutions, and state legislators in 11 states have introduced impeachment bills.
But given how controversial and deeply unpopular the administration has become, it is surprising how little mainstream political traction the movement has gained. Polls show the public does not think impeachment should be a priority. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi has repeatedly declared impeachment to be "off the table," and even Congress's most liberal members oppose the idea. It is a sign, say many, that the nation's most vivid memories of impeachment are of the deeply divisive Clinton proceedings, not the Nixon drama that eventually allowed the country to heal.
"Somehow along the way in this country we have become really afraid of impeaching," says Darcy Sweeney, a Massachusetts coordinator for Progressive Democrats of America (PDA) and one of the activists who brought the impeachment resolution before the Massachusetts Democratic Party.
The only impeachment resolution currently before Congress, introduced by Ohio Congressman and presidential hopeful Dennis Kucinich this spring, is directed solely at Cheney, and when asked, Kucinich refuses to say whether he'd support impeaching Bush. "I'm pretty much staying focused on the effort to impeach the Vice President," he says.
At a panel at last week's Take Back America conference, an annual gathering of progressive activists and politicians, three of the Senate's most liberal members -- Sherrod Brown, Bernie Sanders, and Amy Klobuchar -- flatly declared themselves against impeachment. Even Rep. John Conyers, a fierce Bush critic who in 2005 filed a bill calling for possible impeachment proceedings, has backed away from the idea -- despite the fact that his wife sponsored the Detroit city council's own unanimously approved impeachment resolution.
Most Democratic politicians and strategists see impeachment as a loser. Right now, President Bush is one of the least popular presidents in American history, and Democratic leaders don't see any point in turning him into a political martyr. Just as important, they argue, the time-consuming, rancorous debates that the process would occasion would elbow any other business off the legislative agenda, leaving the Democratic Party little to show for its return to power on Capitol Hill.
To impeachment's champions, however, these tactical arguments are worth little. What's at stake, they argue, is the Constitution itself. "I'd like to see [Bush and Cheney] tried and convicted and put behind bars," says Washington's David Swanson, co-founder of After Downing Street, an organization dedicated to doing just that. "That would be a satisfactory outcome. Not because I dislike them or think they're unpleasant people, but I don't want future presidents to think they can do these things."
The case against Bush does echo certain elements of the case against Nixon. As articulated by organizations like PDA and After Downing Street -- and as laid out in a spate of recent books by lawyers like Holtzman; John Bonifaz, a former Massachusetts Secretary of State candidate and After Downing Street co-founder; and Barbara Olshansky, who represents several Guantanamo detainees -- Bush stands accused of overseeing illegal surveillance and of lying to Congress and withholding information.
In 1973, the House Judiciary Committee approved articles of impeachment charging Nixon with similar crimes -- obstructing justice and spying on and harassing political opponents -- for personal political gain. Nixon resigned rather than face impeachment.
"We felt that the Constitutional system had worked," Holtzman recalls.
But the brief the would-be impeachers bring against Bush and Cheney is more sweeping than the 1973 case against Nixon. A list of impeachable offenses listed on After Downing Street's website includes the President's "allowing his administration to condone torture," threatening the use of force against Iran, his use of presidential signing statements to revise laws passed by Congress, the dropping of cluster bombs in Iraq, and Bush's failure to take reasonable steps to protect New Orleans from Hurricane Katrina.
Most mainstream legal scholars, including many who have been deeply critical of the Bush administration, would disagree that most of these alleged offenses fit the "high crimes and misdemeanors" requirement set out in the Constitution for impeachment. But on wiretapping in particular, some allow that there is an argument to be made.
"It's an allegation of serious criminal misconduct arising out of the exercise of the power of the presidency," says Mark Tushnet, a professor at Harvard Law School. "If it turns out that the President was authorizing illegal activity, it's comparable to Nixon."
For Democratic strategists, though, legal arguments are beside the point. Their case against pursuing impeachment is straightforwardly political. While every poll shows deep dissatisfaction with Bush and some show a conditional support for impeachment, even registered Democrats don't tend to list impeachment among their top priorities.
Pursuing impeachment today, Democratic leaders argue, would galvanize a Republican Party that's currently quite discouraged with Bush.
"In an ironic way it does George Bush a favor," says Rep. Barney Frank, Democrat from Newton. "He is losing the national debate on most issues, he is losing support among Republicans, and impeachment would almost certainly allow him to rally lots of Republicans."
It would also, they argue, put an end to any hope of passing significant legislation in the remaining year and a half of the current Congress. Congressional politics, says Ruy Teixeira, a political analyst at the liberal Center for American Progress, "is a zero-sum game: the resources and energy you put into trying to impeach Bush don't go into other things."
That legislative sclerosis, Frank argues, would only be worsened by the inevitable sharpening of partisan lines that impeachment would create. "The single most important thing for Congress to do is to get us out of Iraq," says Frank. "And especially in the Senate, that can't be done without Republican votes."
For impeachment proponents like Carpenter and Swanson -- who are optimistic that their cause will find broad support in the coming months -- gridlock would be a small price to pay to restore the Constitution's balance of powers. But they also dispute the zero-sum argument. Again, they look to Nixon.
"The overwhelming pressure of impeachment forced Nixon to back off, to not veto bills," says Swanson. "It put Nixon on the defensive."
According to Swanson, the impending threat of impeachment allowed the Democratic-controlled Congress to create the Endangered Species Act, to raise the minimum wage, and cut off funding for the Vietnam War.
"There's a grain of truth to that," concedes Stanley Kutler, a retired professor of law and history at the University of Wisconsin and the author of "The Wars of Watergate." Nixon was weakened, Kutler says, by the prospect of impeachment. But what truly cost Nixon, Kutler points out, was not Democratic support for impeachment, overwhelming though it was, but Republican support for it. "I can flat-out tell you there's not going to be any impeachment until and unless you have Republican votes," Kutler says.
And the difficulties that the impeachment movement is having convincing Democrats to sign on suggests that it's going to have even less luck with Republicans.
Ultimately, the decision is a political one. Even in Nixon's case, Kutler points out, some Republicans stood by the president until the bitter end. Among them was a first-term Mississippi congressman on the judiciary committee named Trent Lott, who declared himself opposed to impeaching presidents. A quarter-century later, as Senate majority leader, he helped lead the drive to impeach Clinton.
Drake Bennett is the staff writer for Ideas. E-mail drbennett@globe.com. © Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company



Op-ed in Chicago Sun-Times 9/23; posted on Common Dreams.org, portside.org and truthout.org, where it was the lead article
Mention of Liz’s presentation at Camp Democracy, including book, in Baltimore Chronicle & Sentinel 9/18
Mother Jones (impeachment essay 11/1)
Roll Call magazine interview happening 9/21; print date TK
Library Journal 10/1: “…present[s] a well-organized brief for lay readers, arguing that Bush should be impeached for deception over the Iraq war, illegal wiretapping, condoning torture, reckless indifference to human life during Hurricane Katrina and in Iraq, and for the outing of CIA agent Valerie Plame.”
Publishers Weekly 9/4: “…an important, comprehensive argument and document for our current political moment.”



TV/Radio

BTL:Grassroots Impeachment Campaign Launches Drive to...
by Between the Lines' Scott Harris Sunday, 12/17/2006 at 6:56 AM
betweenthelines@snet.net BETWEEN THE LINES c/o WPKN Radio 89.5 FM Bridgeport, Connecticut

Impeachment on Fox News Elizabeth Holtzman appeared on the Hannity and Colmes show on Fox News. 12/11/2006

Former Watergate-Era Congresswoman Advocates Impeachment of Bush for Violations of U.S. Constitution - Interview with former U.S. Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman, D-N.Y., conducted by Scott Harris (Real Audio) (Streaming Video)

30 Issues in 30 Days: Investigate? Impeach?
Elizabeth Holtzman - on whether George W. Bush should be investigated and impeached, and how it can be done. WNYC Brian Lehrer Show 10/24/06

WBAI Sunday Salon What's wrong with Congress? Can it be fixed? And if so, how? 10/22
Catherine Crier Live on Court TV live interview 10/5; arrival 5:15pm
Jim Bohannon Show live 9/29 10:30-11pm EDT
XM Radio “The Agenda” interview 9/25
Radio Nation with Laura Flanders 9/24
“Eveything New York” on WWRL (the NYC Air America affiliate) aired 9/16
KPFK - Interview with Lila Garrett 9/11
“Beneath the Surface” on KPFK 9/13
KNX AM (CBS News affiliate)
KFWB AM
KPFK covered LA event
Free Speech TV
 

 

 

 

 


 Email: Info@ImpeachBushBook.com with links to your impeachment related media clips.