June 28, 2004
Role Reversal—Bush Boosts
Government Power, Democrats Resist
By Paul Craig Roberts
Since
1932 Democrats have been so confident of the
inherent virtue of government that they have been
willing to trust any amount of power to it. The liberal
agenda boiled down to the growth of government power.
Republicans were
the naysayers, forever quoting the
Founding Fathers’
warnings that government power meant liberty’s
demise.
The
administration of President George W. Bush has brought a
reversal of these positions. Conservative
Republicans argue that government can be trusted with
any amount of power in the war against terrorism.
Habeas corpus, the
attorney-client privilege,
due process—indeed, the full range of constitutional
rights—have been set aside as obstacles to the war on
terrorism.
Patriotic
citizens have nothing to fear, say the conservatives, as
the police state methods will only be employed against
terrorists.
Such assurances
have always proven false.
We were assured
that the war against the Mafia required a new power to
freeze a suspect’s assets and that the draconian power
would only be used against gangsters. The new power
quickly
spread everywhere, even into
divorce cases.
We were promised
that the asset confiscations employed in the war against
drugs would only be used on drug lords. When
I last looked in 2000 there were 140 federal crimes
that permitted asset forfeiture, and the practice had
spread into state law. Some states permit asset
confiscation for every felony on the books.
The war on
terror has brought an even more rapid growth in
arbitrary, unaccountable police power, as every airline
passenger knows. Lowly airport security personnel can
put citizens who object to an intrusive search or have
an “attitude” on no-fly lists. A kid with a toy
water pistol in his carryon bag can be detained.
Citizens can be fined if airport security arbitrarily
rules that an item in a carryon bag is
“inappropriate.” One bride returning from her
wedding was fined $150 for having a
silver cake server in her bag.
Power corrupts.
Absolute power corrupts absolutely.
President Bush’s
war on terror has resulted in the greatest growth in
police state powers since Adolf Hitler subverted German
democracy. Republicans cheer this growth as necessary to
our safety. It is the Democrats who are having second
thoughts.
Senator Robert
Byrd (D, WVa), the Constitution’s greatest—and perhaps
only—defender in the US government, early warned that
elements in the Bush administration were using deception
to manufacture an Iraq crisis. The consequences would be
dire, Byrd predicted. The US would cease to be perceived
as peacemaker and be seen as warmonger. To facilitate
its conduct of war, Byrd warned that the Bush
administration would seek to reduce the powers of
Congress and the rights of citizens.
In his
June 24 speech at Georgetown University Law Center,
Vice President Al Gore detailed the extent to which
President Bush has unbalanced the balance of powers and
destroyed the US Constitution by his claim to executive
dictatorship.
President Bush,
backed by the
Department of Justice (sic) has assumed the power to
label any citizen an “unlawful enemy combatant,” to
arrest and imprison the citizen, hold him in secrecy
without the right to see a lawyer and without the
necessity of charging him with a crime, and to authorize
his torture.
President Bush
has asserted the power to invade any nation on earth
subject only to his decision.
President Bush
has merged his role of president with commander-in-chief
in order to claim that he is above the law.
Republicans are
pleased with Bush’s role as Caesar, arguing that
unconstitutional power is necessary to fight the war
against terrorism. Conservative media such as Fox
News, National Review, Weekly Standard,
and the Wall St Journal editorial page glorify
Bush’s exercise of illegitimate powers.
It is Al Gore,
not conservative Republicans, who invokes
George Washington,
Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, and James
Madison. It is Al Gore who says, “We cannot depend
upon a debased Department of Justice given over to the
hands of zealots,” who are determined to create a
presidency unconstrained by law or the Constitution, the
better to impose their political will.
Are we
witnessing an American version of the Reichstag fire in
which
dictatorial powers are created and civil rights
subverted in the name of crisis?
Can the Bush
administration be held accountable for unprecedented
lies and deceptions?
Will the newly
asserted powers of the executive survive Bush’s
administration and permanently unbalance the balance of
powers?
The stakes for
liberty and political accountability have never been
higher than they will be in November.
COPYRIGHT CREATORS
SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts is the author with Lawrence M.
Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice