[WASHINGTON (Thursday, Oct. 18, 2007) – The
Senate Judiciary Committee returned for a second day of questioning of
Attorney General nominee Michael B. Mukasey to be the next Attorney
General of the United States. Mukasey faced questions from Committee
Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) and others about executive privilege,
torture, and the Administration’s warrantless wiretapping program.
Leahy’s remarks at the conclusion of Mukasey’s testimony follow.]
Closing Remarks Of Sen. Patrick Leahy,
Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee,
At The Conclusion Of Attorney General Nominee Michael Mukasey’s
Testimony
October 18, 2007
I hope that these hearings turn out to be a step on
the road to restoring the Department of Justice.
I noted yesterday when these hearings began that we
face the most serious threat to the effectiveness and professionalism of
the United States Department of Justice since Watergate and the Saturday
Night Massacre.
After Richard Nixon became the only American
President to resign from office, President Ford appointed Edward Levi
and former Judge Harold Tyler to begin the process of restoring the
Department of Justice. Now we have reached another critical juncture.
I expedited this hearing because we need an effective and functioning
Department of Justice. It is too important an institution in this
country to remain dysfunctional. I hope that Judge Mukasey, like
another former federal judge with whom he worked, Harold Tyler, will
begin to restore the Department’s integrity and reputation and lead it
back to fulfilling its law enforcement mission for all Americans. Judge
Mukasey testified that the Department must stand for the rule of law. I
agree and would add to its mandate that it must stand for justice.
Nothing is more fundamental to our constitutional
democracy than our basic notion that no one is above the law. This
Administration has undercut that precept time and time again. Just one
example of this was the President’s commutation of the sentence given to
Scooter Libby, the former chief of staff to the Vice President, who was
convicted after a fair jury trial of lying to the FBI and to a grand
jury, and of obstructing justice. More and more, we see this
Administration promoting immunity over accountability, secrecy over
responsiveness to congressional oversight, and unilateral power over the
checks and balances that have defined this Nation and protected
Americans’ rights and liberties for more than two centuries.
This Administration’s view that the President is
above the law and may override it as he chooses is about as extreme a
view of executive power as ever I have witnessed. I believe that it is
not only dead wrong in constitutional terms, but that it is extremely
dangerous to our democracy. The cost to American liberty, our standing
in the world, and to the security of our soldiers and citizens is
staggering — even more staggering than the trillion dollar cost of the
war in Iraq. The Administration has compounded its lawlessness by
cloaking its policies and miscalculations under a veil of secrecy,
leaving Congress, the courts and the American people in the dark about
what they are doing.
Yesterday and today we have had an opportunity for
dialogue. I have made clear that I am not satisfied with all of the
nominee’s answers. I am especially troubled by his retreat today from
his clearer statements yesterday on the rule of law and the President
not being above the law. I remain troubled that he also now seems to be
positing a system where a President’s overbroad and invalid claims of
executive privilege cannot be tested. These are important areas on
which we will continue to meet, to talk and to work.
In order to succeed at repairing the damage that
has been done, Judge Mukasey must act in accordance with the
understanding that the duty of the Attorney General is to uphold the
Constitution and the rule of law — not to try to bend the law to the
current President’s agenda. Never again can the American Government
seek to define torture down in secret and in fundamental conflict with
American values and law. I agree with the nominee’s sentiment from his
opening statement that “protecting civil liberties and people’s
confidence that those liberties are protected is part of protecting
national security,” and I would add that they are a fundamental American
value and strength.
These hearings can be the start of a new chapter,
where American law and values are no longer undercut in secret. The
bottom line for this nomination is not that Judge Mukasey will be
confirmed but rather how he acts as Attorney General. That will be the
real test.
The oversight process – and an Attorney General’s
cooperation with that process – helps forge a constructive working
partnership. To paraphrase Ronald Reagan, a confirmation in part is an
act of trust, and oversight helps us verify. This Committee, Democrats
and Republicans, are ready and willing to work with the nominee. In
fact, we have already started.
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