Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Rudy and the Monsignor....

The Washington Monthly picks up on the fact that Rudy is truly the heir apparent and true torch carrier for the radical expansion of executive power that the Bush administration has grabbed. As Digby says, "this is the guy the unitary executive was designed for".

Today, Giuliani is a front-runner for the presidency of the United States. Since 9/11 the office he seeks has been radically remade. Led by Dick Cheney, the Bush administration has expanded White House powers to levels unseen since the Nixon years. Claiming an inherent authority to act outside the law, it has unilaterally set aside treaties, intercepted telephone calls between citizens without court warrants, detained individuals indefinitely without judicial review, ordered "enhanced interrogations," or torture, prohibited by law, and claimed the ability to disregard more than 1,000 parts of legislation that it has deemed to improperly restrict its authority. To thwart oversight and checks on its power, all spheres of executive branch operations have been fortified by heightened secrecy.

This expansion has warped policy decisions, undermined the country's authority abroad, and damaged the framework of laws, institutions, and processes that secure citizens against abuse by the state. It also prompts two of the most crucial, if as yet unasked, questions of the 2008 presidential race: Which contenders are most likely to relinquish some of these powers, or, at the very least, decline to fully use them? And, alternatively, which candidate is most likely to not only embrace the powers that Bush has claimed, but to seize more? The reply to the first question is complicated, but to the second it's simple: Rudy Giuliani.


Read the whole thing. We really miss Steve Gilliard, who was so deft at pointing out how much New Yorkers despised Rudy by the end of his second term.

Such hubris, pettiness, and blind stubbornness would probably manifest itself in day to day decisions that Rudy makes on the campaign trail, wouldn't it? Hmmmm......

Meet Monsignor Alan Placa

The statute of limitations is a wonderful thing.....

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