Monthly Archives: February 2004

Sierra Club Moves for Scalia Recusal

There's no way Justice Scalia can duck the issue now that Sierra Club has formally moved for recusal in the Cheney case.

The Sierra Club today formally requested the recusal of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia from its case against Vice President Cheney and the secret Energy Task Force. Citing the intense public attention drawn to the January duck hunting trip taken by Cheney and Scalia, the Sierra Club reluctantly concluded that recusal is necessary to “redress an appearance of impropriety and to restore public confidence in the integrity of our nation's highest court.”

“Unfortunately, the Cheney-Scalia vacation mirrors the secrecy with which the Bush Administration often conducts business,” said David Bookbinder, Sierra Club's Washington Legal Director. “The public is continually shut out.”

The recusal motion filed today cites the dozens of editorials and editorial cartoons calling for Justice Scalia's withdrawal from the case as evidence that his impartiality is being reasonably questioned—the federal test for recusal. From the editorials and cartoons in papers across the country, to Jay Leno's monologue on the Tonight show, opinion leaders are questioning this trip and how it reflects on the Supreme Court.

“The public debate clearly echoes the common sense conclusion that the duck-hunting vacation taken by Cheney and Scalia creates the appearance of impropriety,” said Bookbinder.

The tactic of using the public commentary as evidence is sort of interesting, and demonstrates the wisdom—and also the possible vice—of the standard being one of 'reasonable appearance'.

On balance, I think it's a good standard, as one doesn't wish to put litigants into the postion of having to claim actual bias. No one would, and they'd never win. And this case is one where I think that the reasonable appearance of bias is quite clear. But I could imagine many cases in which the papers had a field day, but the accusation was not reasonable.

Bottom line: I don't sign on to the 'lots of smoke equals fire' view. A public outrcry, or even lots of jokes, is not sufficient to create a need for a recusal. And I don't understand the Sierra Club (based on the press release quoted above) to be arguing that the issue is that simple either. Rather, I take it that the evidence of public beliefs is presented at least in part to counter Scalia's public dismisal of the reasonableness of the concern in this case.

Just to repeat in case you missed it: the case involves the legality of secret meetings between Chaney and oil company execs. Some have alleged/speculated that in addition to discussing how to gut environmental rules, some pariticpants disucssed who would get access to Iraq's oil…and this in the early days of the current administration.

Justice Scalia's long and private trip—a multi-day secret meeting, albeit a social even not a business meeting—suggests not only a close relation with the litigant, but also a tin ear to the issues of openness.

Continue reading

Posted in Law: Ethics | Comments Off on Sierra Club Moves for Scalia Recusal

Supremes Let Stand Evil Ruling in ‘Secret Habeas’ Case

CALIFORNIA YANKEE: Supreme Court Refuses “Secret Case”: In an astounding decision the U.S. Supreme Court has decided not to hear the “secret case.”

The Supreme Court's decision means it is okay for a federal appellate court's published calendar to be obliterated to omit the names of litigants. ; a federal appellate court's computer records to be altered to remove from public view any information about the case; a federal appellate court to close its courtroom to the public and the press to hear arguments in a case; and for litigants to be prohibited from talking about it.

I didn't think this could happen in America.

What he said.

More info on the (surprising!) cert denial from AP.

Earlier posts of mine on this depressing case are The Secret Attack on the Right to an Open Court and an update . The only silver lining is that one of my brilliant colleagues is all over this one.

Posted in Civil Liberties | 1 Comment

Connect the Dots: How Iraq’s Chalabi-ites Have BushCo By the Short & Curlies

Connect the dots:

  • The Bush administration is desperate to transfer sovereignty to someone, anyone, in Iraq by June 30. The date is important because, now that a Constitution, elections, and caucuses are all off the table in the short run, it's about the only shard of the original policy left standing. Also, the administration hopes that letting go (formally) of Iraq can be spun as progress, can be an occasion for bring home a token number of troops, and thus will have dividends in the US's November election.
  • A critical part of the neocon's rationale for the Iraq invasion was to set up permanent US bases
  • Item: This remains an official objective of US policy.
  • There is currently no long-term agreement, commonly called a “status of forces agreement” with any Iraqi authority.
  • The current governing council — little of which would survive an election — would probably be willing to sign a status of forces agreement favorable to the US in exchange for an extension of its life into the post-sovereignty period. But the agreement would not be perceived as legitimate (nor would the council).
  • If a representative Iraqi government is seated by June 30, it's not at all clear that it would agree to a long-term US presence in Iraq.
  • France has signaled that it might be willing to approve a NATO force in Iraq, but that “NATO can only be involved at the behest of an Iraqi government and with the prior agreement of the United Nations.”

Conclusion: As noted in the Dreyfus Report, this is a major looming headache for the neoconservative tendency in US foreign policy. There is now a serious danger that a radical Islamic regime will win a free election. Meanwhile, the US's insistence of the fixity of it's June “handover” date — for all that the handover may be primarily semantic — severely weakens its hand in dealing both with the Governing Council and with opposition figures like Ayatollah Sistani. The Governing Council figures it can demand a hold on power in exchange for a status of forces agreement. Sistani surely figures that time is on his side, reducing his incentive to be cooperative.

Irony: The people in the US who were most vociferous about going into Iraq tend to be those most desperately anxious to find a way out, fast. The people, like me, who opposed the invasion, are now uncomfortable with a premature departure that might either entrench the power of the kleptocrats like Chalabi who suckered in the Bush admnistration and continue to profiteer from the positions our troops created for them. Even worse would be any sort of departure that would cause chaos or empower a militant, regressive, theocratic regime. In the abstract, transferring sovereignty ASAP to the Iraqi people sounds like a really good idea; in practice it seems there needs to be some legitimate institutions to exercise it, and to the extent that those institutions are in fact representative, they may not be very pretty. And the only possible way out may involve some crawling to France and to the UN.

Posted in Iraq | Comments Off on Connect the Dots: How Iraq’s Chalabi-ites Have BushCo By the Short & Curlies

Blocking Ads In Firefox

One thing I have not liked about firefox is that it doesn't play that nice with AdSubtract, the ad-blocking proxy I've come to rely on. It works OK with 2.x, but not great under win98se, and really lousy under win xp. And Firefox's relationship with Adsubtract 3.0—which doesn't claim to support anything other than IE, a really retrograde move—is even worse.

All of a sudden, I think I've found the solution. Google took me to dennis.ca, where there is not only a pointer to a firefox plugin for ad blocking, but also a list of adblock filters and host files to prime the pump. I just hope it works half as well as advertised.

Posted in Software | 4 Comments

Another Argument for a Tivo?

Another reason I'm glad I don't have a TV set:

Bush Re-election Ads to Begin in March: President Bush's re-election campaign will begin running television commercials on March 4, even if the Democrats have not yet settled on a nominee, Ken Mehlman, Mr. Bush's campaign manager, said on Sunday.

Mr. Bush's campaign managers had expected to wait until the spring or summer before beginning a more active phase of the campaign. But the continuing attacks by Democrats on Mr. Bush's record, along with the president's drop behind Senators John Kerry and John Edwards in recent opinion polls, led them to change the plan.

Saying you are running scared is not the sign of an operation that is doing a good job of staying on message.

Posted in Politics: US: 2004 Election | Comments Off on Another Argument for a Tivo?

1296 Feeds

This Scobliezer guy says he reads 1296 feeds to cull items for his blog. Although it seems he mostly just looks at headlines. And there I was worrying because my list of feeds is almost four screens long…

Hmmm…I wonder if my headlines are as informative as they could be.

Incidentally, I'm a very happy user of a server-side blog aggregating tool called feed on feeds. It's not pretty, and I have a wishlist of features for the perfect version of it, but it's very very useful if you read blognews from more than one machine.

Continue reading

Posted in Blogs, Software | Comments Off on 1296 Feeds