Obama Allows Holder to Assert Executive Privilege on Fast and Furious
It took at year for House Oversight Committee chair Darrell Issa to convince Speaker John Boehner to agree to a floor vote over holding Attorney General Eric Holder in contempt, because Boehner not only wanted to stay focused on the economy, but because he didn't want to repeat of Rep. Dan Burton backyard pumpkin target practice. During his 1994 quest to prove that Vince Foster, deputy White House counsel in Bill Clinton's White House, had not committed suicide but rather had been murdered, the Indiana Republican invited reporters to his house, took out his own pistol, and shot a pumpkin (some say a cantaloupe or watermelon) to see, as he said on the House floor, "if the sound could be heard from a hundred yards away." The test was successful, but the demonstration almost ruined Republican congressional investigations forever. On Fox & Friends earlier this month, Geraldo Rivera said Issa's committee "looks more and more radical to their own Republican leadership" and that the division "diminishes profoundly the clout of the committee."
To get his Fast and Furious investigation going, Politico's Josh Gerstein and Jake Sherman report, Issa had to intensely lobby Boehner. Issa's campaign included:
Boehner was officially convinced on May 18, when he and Issa signed a joint letter which was a sign a contempt vote was coming, but he's made it clear that he was not as psyched about the investigation as Issa. Talking about the investigation on Laura Ingraham's radio show on Thursday, Boehner said, "And while politically this may not be the smartest thing to do, we have taken an oath of office and we are required to follow it." He added, "I and the leadership team worked very closely with Chairman Issa to make sure that all the t's were crossed, all the i's were dotted," Boehner told Ingraham. After the vote, committee member Rep. Jason Chaffetz told Boehner after the vote: "Thanks for having the guts to let us have this."
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Elspeth Reeve
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