Meet The Black Hillary Clinton: UPDATE

Shantanu

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<< Civil Rights Commission Meeting Heading for Circus Tent

Thursday, December 06, 2001


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WASHINGTON ? Administration officials are trying to avoid a three-ring circus at Friday's regularly-scheduled meeting of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission, but they may have little luck since the committee's chairwoman has taken the role of ringmaster.


In a letter sent Wednesday to White House counsel Al Gonzales, chairwoman Mary Frances Berry said the administration will have to send in U.S. marshals to seat their newly-appointed commission member, Peter Kirsanow, a Cleveland lawyer and member of the largely conservative Center for New Black Leadership.

Berry's threats brought howls from White House spokesman Ari Fleischer, who said that's exactly the wrong approach for a civil rights commissioner to take.

"She said that she would refuse to seat any new people appointed by President Bush in this manner. She said the appointment the president announced yesterday, she said she will refuse to appoint him. She said she will refuse to swear him in. She said that the law says that she, a Clinton appointee, gets a new six years. She further said that the only way that she will let this person be seated is if the United States marshals show up and force her to do so," Fleischer said.

The dispute arose over the expiration of the term of Victoria Wilson, an independent commission member who was tapped by President Clinton in January 2000 to complete the term of Judge A. Leon Higgenbotham, Jr., who died in 1998.

Berry, who has a frequent ally in Wilson, is demanding that she be allowed to complete the commission's six-year term, rather than finish up Higgenbotham's term, which expired Nov. 29. Berry and Wilson argue that federal statutes say new commissioners will fill a six-year term.

"The 1994 statute says that if there is a vacancy the term of any new member is six years ? period," said Leon Friedman, attorney for Wilson and a professor of constitutional law at Hofstra University. He said the statute was amended in 1994 to simplify it.

But Gonzales said in his letter that Wilson's appointment specifically stated her commission would expire Nov. 29, 2001. He said there is no official record of any efforts by Wilson to contact the White House clerk and amend her appointment to a six-year commission term.

Fleischer added that appointing Wilson to serve a six-year term is contrary to the commission's rules that require a staggering of terms.

"Otherwise, if you could have people step down and then appoint new people to a new six-year term, you could game the Civil Rights Commission so that a president could appoint six people of his own choosing to serve new six-year terms. And that is not the way the Civil Rights Commission was set up," he said.

But Berry, who knows that Kirsanow will temper her authority, remained defiant. She said the dispute is "about the independence and integrity of the commission. It's a unique agency ? a watchdog over the enforcement of civil rights, by the president, the Justice Department and all federal agencies."

Gonzales said her refusal to seat Kirsanow at the next commission meeting would "violate the law."

The White House announced Kirsanow's appointment late Wednesday. The commission is currently split 6-2 between commissioners who lean Democratic and lean Republican. The White House last month announced it intends to appoint Jennifer Cabranes Braceras to replace Yvonne Lee, whose term expires in early December. The Kirsanow appointment would split the commission 4-4 along largely partisan lines and would likely hinder Berry's ability to take actions with the backing of a majority of the commission.

In her work for the commission, Berry has criticized every president since Jimmy Carter, who appointed her and later got pressure from her over the levels of financial aid for the poor. President Reagan fired her but had to reinstate her after a lawsuit. Former Presidents Bush and Clinton haven't been spared.

"You went so far as to state that it would require the presence of federal marshals to seat him," Gonzales said in his letter, referring to Kirsanow. "I respectfully urge you to abandon this confrontational and legally untenable position."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Whoa. This woman has an enormous sense of entitlement; perhaps an even one bigger than a certain junior Senator from New York. The equivalent of what she plans to do would have been Bill Clinton refusing to turn over power at the end of his term. You see this sort of thing a lot in the 3rd world, but this is the first time I've heard of it happening in America.

Speaking as a minority, I don't the Civil Rights comission represents my interests at all. It should be called "The organization to promote the interest of blacks, and a few token Mexicans at the expense of everyone else". I'd much rather see the damn thing abolished, but that's an issue for another debate...
 

Draco

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Oct 10, 1999
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I was expecting a photoshopped picture of Hillary Clinton made black.
 

Shantanu

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Feb 6, 2001
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Here's another read.

This is something that Bush must absolutely fight. If these people are allowed to get away with it, it will set an extroadinarily damaging and dangerous precedent. At the end of a President's term, all he'll have to do is asked all his term limited appointments to step down, and appoint new partisans to fill their spots. In the Congress, a person could step down right before the elections, and be reappointed by their govornor (if they're from the same party). Theoretically, they could stay in power for life, and never face the electorate. Scary indeed.
 

AU Tiger

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Dec 26, 1999
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I would believe that she could be endangering her own job with the comments and actions that she is threatening. She is suffering from the delusion that she has a "right" to be where she is.
 

Shantanu

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Feb 6, 2001
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I was absolutely in shock after reading today's update:



<< Victoria the Usurper
The civil-rights commission?s illegal member takes her seat.

By John J. Miller & Ramesh Ponnuru
December 7, 2001 3:30 p.m.

Mary Frances Berry and her subordinates at the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights denied Peter Kirsanow his seat on the panel this morning, even though President Bush appointed him to the post on Wednesday and a judge swore him in last night. "We won't stand down," insisted Berry, the commission's chairwoman.

Kirsanow is supposed to replace Victoria Wilson, a liberal whose term expired on November 29. But Wilson, who was chosen to fill out the term of the late Leon Higginbotham, insists that she's entitled to a full six-year term rather than the remainder of Higginbotham's. This would keep her on the commission until 2006, even though her formal paperwork says that she should have left the building last week.

It's a bizarre reading of the law, but one that Berry chose to accept as she and the commission's left-wing majority (including Wilson) blocked a series of motions offered by the GOP-appointed members on everything from seating Kirsanow to simply allowing Kirsanow to make a statement for the record.

"What we saw today had nothing to do with this commission's mission of promoting civil rights. It was an unvarnished defiance of the rule of law ? the very rule of law that this commission is charged with protecting," said Republican commissioners Jennifer Braceras, Russell Redenbaugh, and Abigail Thernstrom in a joint statement. They went on to note that both the White House counsel's office and career lawyers at the Department of Justice believe Kirsanow is the rightful commissioner.

The dispute ultimately will be settled in the courts ? but Wilson's position does not appear tenable except through willful ignorance. Early in the meeting, for instance, Berry displayed on a projector the statute governing commissioners' terms. The section of the law in question is precisely two sentences long. Berry, however, showed only the first sentence and represented it as complete. Yet it is the second sentence ? the one she chose to hide from view ? which makes plain that Peter Kirsanow is the newest member of the civil-rights commission.

"We are confident that in due course the law will be vindicated and Mr. Kirsanow will take his rightful seat beside us," concluded the statement by Braceras, Redenbaugh, and Thernstrom.

Mary Frances Berry's leadership of the commission was a disgrace long before today. Now, she is trying to lead a lawless rump commission. She is unfit for public office.
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If this doesn't make your blood boil, you're either against democracy or some sort of communist (a minor distinction either way).

Civil Rights?!?!? What about my civil rights, damnit? What about my right to have a government free of self-appointed queens and dictatorships? What about right to a government that follows its own rule of law? :|