U.S. Attorney General Held in Contempt by House of Representatives
With more than 100 Democrats boycotting, the U.S. House of
Representatives held Attorney General Eric Holder in criminal contempt of
Congress for failing to provide documents related to a failed gun-tracking
operation. It was the first time a sitting Cabinet member has been held in
contempt.
The vote Thursday was 255-67. Boycotting Democrats said the
contempt resolution was a political stunt.
Republicans accuse Holder, the top U.S. lawyer, of
stonewalling the investigation of "Operation Fast and Furious," in
which guns purchased in the United States were taken to Mexico. Democrats
charge the vote was politically motivated ahead of the November election in
which their leader President Barack Obama is seeking a second term.
The vote on a criminal contempt resolution sent the matter
to the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, who is under Holder. In
previous contempt cases, federal prosecutors in the U.S. capital have refused
to act on congressional contempt citations against members of their own
administration.
Black lawmakers led a walkout as members filed up the aisle
and out of the chamber to protest the action against Holder, who is the
nation's first black attorney general. Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi joined
the boycott, saying Republicans had gone "over the edge" in their
partisanship.
Seventeen Democrats voted with Republicans in favor of the
contempt vote, while two Republicans — joined other Democrats in voting No.
A separate vote on civil contempt passed 258-95. It will
allow the House to go to court in an effort to forceHolder to turn over the
documents. In past cases, courts have been reluctant to settle disputes between
the legislative and executive branches.
The National Rifle Association, a gun advocacy group,
pressed hard for the contempt resolution, leaning on members of both parties
who want to stay in the NRA's good graces. Holder said afterward the vote was
merely a politically motivated act in an election year.
Republicans cited Holder's refusal to hand over — without
any preconditions — documents that could explain why the Obama administration
initially denied that a risky "gun-walking" investigative tactic was
used in Operation Fast and Furious, which allowed hundreds of guns to be
smuggled to Mexico.
During the debate before the vote, Republicans said they were
seeking answers for the family of Brian Terry, a Border Patrol agent killed in
December 2010 in a shootout with Mexican bandits. Two guns from Fast and
Furious were found at the scene.
Democrats insisted that they, too, wanted the Terry family
to have all the facts, but argued that only a more thorough, bipartisan
investigation would accomplish that.
"Today's vote may make for good political theater in
the minds of some, but it is — at base — both a crass effort and a grave
disservice to the American people. They expect — and they deserve — far
better," Holdersaid in New Orleans.
The NRA urged House members to vote for contempt, contending
the administration wanted to use Operation Fast and Furious to win gun control
measures. Democrats who normally support the NRA, but who vote against the
contempt citations would lose any 100 percent ratings from the group.
That could affect whether they get endorsements from the
powerful organization, particularly if Republican opponents surface who are
strong NRA backers. But a former NRA board member and the longest-serving House
member, Rep. John Dingell argued gun control was not at issue. He failed in
attempt to head off the contempt votes.
The dispute is both legal and political. Republicans
asserted their right to obtain documents needed for an investigation of
Operation Fast and Furious — focusing on 10 months in 2011 after the Obama
administration initially denied guns were allowed to "walk" from
Arizona to Mexico. By year's end, the administration acknowledged the assertion
was wrong.
Obama asserted a broad form of executive privilege, a legal
position designed to keep executive branch documents from being disclosed. The
assertion ensures that documents will not be turned over any time soon, unless
a deal is reached between the administration and congressional Republicans.
For the past year and a half, some Republicans have promoted
the idea that Holder and other top-level officials at the Justice Department
knew federal agents in Operation Fast and Furious had engaged in gun-walking.
Gun-walking long has been barred by Justice Department
policy, but federal agents in Arizona experimented with it in at least two
investigations during the George W. Bush administration before Operation Fast
and Furious.
SourceAgence France PresseAssociated Press
WorldPolitics
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