There is a tendency to overreact to the daily news, to presume that things will turn out worse than they actually do. But today I think it is a fair assessment to say that Obama, from this point forward for the remainder of his presidency, is hamstrung. Republican slaps and scratches will continue with regards to last year's Benghazi attacks; a series of news-hogging investigations on the Internal Revenue Service's targeting of Tea Party organizations will commence, with a possible silver lining being that light will be shed on the abuse of 501(c)(4) tax-exempt status by overtly partisan, political groups; and as Michael Shear and Jonathan Weisman report today,
Four months into his second term, the president was under increasing assault from Republicans who accused the administration of political bullying and a lack of transparency. Kathleen Sebelius, Mr. Obama’s secretary of health and human services, has drawn criticism in recent days for soliciting corporate donations to pay for the rollout next year of the new health care law.
And on Monday evening, The Associated Press reported that the Justice Department had secretly obtained two months of telephone records of its reporters. The company’s editors called it a “massive and unprecedented intrusion” into its news gathering, and Republicans quickly seized on the report.What has the potential to be the most damaging for Obama is the DOJ investigation of AP. It was paranoia over leaks that brought Nixon down. And what seems to be the case based on a reading of "Phone Records of Journalists Seized by U.S.," by Charlie Savage and Leslie Kaufman, is that Attorney General Eric Holder was goaded into action by Congressional complaints about national security leaks:
Mr. Holder announced the two special leak investigations in June amid calls in Congress for a crackdown on leaks after a spate of disclosures about the bomb plot, cyberwarfare against Iran, Mr. Obama’s procedures for putting terrorism suspects on a “kill list,” and the raid that killed Osama bin Laden. The revelations had been published by The New York Times, The A.P. and in several books.
Republicans accused the administration of deliberately leaking classified information, jeopardizing national security in an effort to make Mr. Obama look tough in an election year — a charge the White House rejected. But some Democrats, too, said the leaking of sensitive information had gotten out of control.
Mr. Holder’s move at the time was sharply criticized by Republicans as not going far enough. They wanted him to appoint an outside special counsel, and a Senate resolution calling for a special counsel was co-sponsored by 29 Republican senators.
On Monday, however, after The A.P. disclosed the seizure of the records, some Republican leaders criticized the administration as going too far. Michael Steel, a spokesman for House Speaker John A. Boehner, said: “The First Amendment is first for a reason. If the Obama Administration is going after reporters’ phone records, they better have a damned good explanation.”And Doug Heye, a spokesman for Representative Eric Cantor of Virginia, the majority leader, linked the revelation to a brewing controversy over the targeting of Tea Party groups for greater scrutiny by the Internal Revenue Service, saying “these new revelations suggest a pattern of intimidation by the Obama administration.”
The A.P. said Monday that it first learned of the seizure of the records last Friday afternoon when its general counsel, Laura Malone, received a letter from Mr. Machen, the United States attorney. The letter to Mr. Holder said the seizure included “all such records for, among other phone lines, an A.P. general phone number in New York City as well as A.P. bureaus in New York City, Washington, D.C., Hartford, Connecticut, and at the House of Representatives.”
The Associated Press is a nonprofit global news cooperative owned by its American newspaper and broadcast members.A legitimate worry about a hamstrung president, based on recent history -- think post-impeachment Clinton and Kosovo, is he tends to indulge in war-making powers (powers Constitutionally residing with Congress but since the creation of the national security state a de facto part of the executive branch). We'll see what Obama is made of. Many a politician in his position would counter the sudden surge of opposition by whipping up a war scare. Syria is ready at hand, even if Libya is proving more failure than success at this point. All in all things are not looking good.
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