End Cheney's Shenanigans

Written by Jason Koulouras
Published September 15, 2004

More light on Vice-President Dick Cheney's double standards - I am really not sure how he sleeps at night......

SECRECY
End Cheney's Shenanigans

For three-and-a-half years, Vice President Dick Cheney has gone to great lengths to conceal who helped him write the administration's ill-conceived energy policy, which is little more than billions in tax giveaways to the energy industry. (We do know, however, through news reports that disgraced Enron CEO Ken Lay was extensively involved.) Cheney repeatedly defied federal court orders to disclose who participated in order to buy himself time to appeal the litigation seeking the information in the Supreme Court. There, five justices did not side with Cheney, but further delayed the ruling by sending the case back to a federal appeals court on technical grounds. (Antonin Scalia, who refused to recuse himself from the case despite going on a hunting trip with Cheney weeks before, subsequently voted to resolve the case in Cheney's favor.) Rep. John Dingell (D-MI) has introduced a resolution, H. Res. 745, that would put an end, once and for all, to Cheney's shenanigans. The resolution would require - within 14 days of passage - that Cheney disclose to the House of Representatives the names of the people who were involved in his energy task force. It is being considered by the House Committee on Energy and Commerce today. Write your representative and say you deserve the truth - urge him or her to vote for the resolution when it reaches the House floor.

BUSH'S ASSAULT ON OPEN GOVERNMENT: A new report by Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) details the Bush administration's assault on open government. The report reveals a consistent pattern whereby "laws designed to promote access to information have been undermined while laws that authorize the government to withhold information or operate in secret have been expanded." The administration has withheld from the public and Congress not only information about Cheney's energy task force but also: communications between the Defense Department and the vice president's office regarding contracts awarded to Halliburton, documents describing the prison abuses at Abu Ghraib, memoranda revealing what the White House knew about Iraq's WMD, and cost estimates of the Medicare prescription drug legislation. Read the full report (or, if you're short on time, the executive summary).

THE COST OF SECRECY: A study by the coalition openthegovernment.org reveals that the excessive secrecy of the Bush administration comes at a high price, literally. According to the report, "the federal government spent $6.5 billion last year creating 14 million new classified documents and securing accumulated secrets - more than it has for at least the past decade." For every dollar the administration spent on declassifying documents last year it spent $120 to keep documents secret.

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End Cheney's Shenanigans
Published: September 15, 2004
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Section: Culture
Writer: Jason Koulouras
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#1 — September 16, 2004 @ 11:11AM — Hal Pawluk [URL]

Good catch. Here's what the Washington Times says:

[The Bush administration is] not only is classifying records at a far higher rate than previous administrations, it is also declassifying them far more slowly, according to a related report released last month. A coalition of 30 organizations issued a report saying the number of documents declassified in 2003 was about one-fifth the number declassified in 1997.

The USA Patriot Act, several executive orders and other legislation sought by the White House in the wake of Sept. 11, 2001, has expanded its power to hold information secret, including changes in the implementation of the Freedom of Information Act, one of the primary means for citizens and the press to get classified information released.

Even the conservative Heritage Foundation weighed in on the issue in July, charging there was too much secrecy in government, but pointing to bureaucrats in the bowels of federal agencies as the main beneficiaries. [Bush hides behind 'classification' Washington Times]

Bush has also extended this so that now documents can be classified as secret by the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Secretary of Agriculture (responsible for hundreds of billions of dollars of subsidies to Big Ag firms) and the Adminstrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (which is now doing the opposite of what you would think it should).

#2 — September 16, 2004 @ 11:38AM — Shark

re: Cheney's criminal background with Halliburton et al:

I'd be happy if they'd give Cheney half of what got Clinton.

Where's Ken Starr when it really matters?


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