July 17, 2008

WP: Ashcroft: Bush White House Sought Justice Rubber Stamp:

Then-Attorney General John D. Ashcroft offered the White House a list of five candidates to lead the Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel in early 2003, but top administration officials summarily rejected them in favor of installing a loyalist who would provide the legal footing needed to continue coercive interrogation techniques and broadly interpret executive power, according to two former administration officials.

In an angry phone call hours after Ashcroft's list reached the White House, President Bush's chief of staff, Andrew H. Card Jr., quickly dismissed the candidates, all Republican lawyers with impeccable credentials, the sources said. He and White House counsel Alberto R. Gonzales insisted that Ashcroft promote John Yoo, a onetime OLC deputy who had worked closely with Gonzales and vice presidential adviser David S. Addington to draft memos supporting a controversial warrantless wiretapping plan and detainee questioning techniques.

Ashcroft's refusal created a tense standoff and was the only time in the attorney general's tenure that Bush was called upon to resolve a personnel dispute, the sources said.

The process led the White House team to introduce a compromise choice -- Jack L. Goldsmith, a Defense Department lawyer then on leave from a teaching post at the University of Chicago Law School.

But Goldsmith's tenure did not proceed as White House aides had expected.

He went on to challenge the administration, rescinding or rewriting several of Yoo's most sensitive memos after unearthing what he called numerous flaws.

The previously unreported disagreement between Ashcroft and the White House underscores the critical role that the once-obscure Office of Legal Counsel came to play in the administration's efforts to devise a strategy to bolster its treatment of terrorism suspects after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. White House spokesman Tony Fratto had no comment yesterday. ...

When Ashcroft and Goldsmith are the whistleblowers, one can only imagine the depth of concern about illegal White House behavior and policies was extreme. See this and this, related.

Posted by Laura at July 17, 2008 12:13 PM