It seems that Gonzales' days are numbered, and it's just a matter of when bush finds a replacement he considers sufficiently foolish, corrupt, and boot-licking enough for the job.
This weekend, they floated Ted Olsen. Olsen, a hack, was too deeply involved in the jihad against Bill Clinton. He can't get confirmed, so I suspect our new AG will be Orrin Hatch, who has been rehearsing for the position for weeks now with some very impressive public bush ass-kissing. I think he's just the fool for bush! I really see those two crazy kids making it. I don't know, maybe it's just the romantic in me.
Poor Gonzales will have to go home and nurse a broken heart...cursed to spend his time reminiscing about the days when he was Bush's number one lackey. You'll get over it Al. When was the last time he even sent you flowers? Complimented you on your suit? Better days are coming and I have no doubt that you'll be somebody else's fool by the end of the year. There's an ass for every seat honey, and bush isn't the only tyrant with delusions of grandeur in the world.
Specter Says Gonzales Presence Is ‘Harmful’
By DIANA JEAN SCHEMO
WASHINGTON, April 22 — Senator Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, the ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said Sunday that Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales’s failure to step down was “no doubt, bad for the Justice Department.”
Mr. Specter’s comments, made on the television program “Fox News Sunday,” reflected a growing lack of support for Mr. Gonzales among key Republicans on Capitol Hill as he faces accusations that the dismissals of eight United States attorneys were politically motivated.
Republicans made their anger at him clear in a blistering hearing over the dismissals on Thursday. In his testimony, Mr. Gonzales cited a faulty memory at least 50 times in responding to questions about the dismissals.
After the hearing, aides to Mr. Gonzales reportedly called the absence of a demand for his resignation from Mr. Specter a “positive barometer.” But Mr. Specter said Sunday that they were misreading him.
“I don’t think they should be celebrating that, because the attorney general’s testimony was very, very damaging to his own credibility,” he said. “Charges are being made that the Department of Justice was the political arm of the White House.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/23/washington/23gonzales.html?pagewanted=print
This weekend, they floated Ted Olsen. Olsen, a hack, was too deeply involved in the jihad against Bill Clinton. He can't get confirmed, so I suspect our new AG will be Orrin Hatch, who has been rehearsing for the position for weeks now with some very impressive public bush ass-kissing. I think he's just the fool for bush! I really see those two crazy kids making it. I don't know, maybe it's just the romantic in me.
Poor Gonzales will have to go home and nurse a broken heart...cursed to spend his time reminiscing about the days when he was Bush's number one lackey. You'll get over it Al. When was the last time he even sent you flowers? Complimented you on your suit? Better days are coming and I have no doubt that you'll be somebody else's fool by the end of the year. There's an ass for every seat honey, and bush isn't the only tyrant with delusions of grandeur in the world.
Specter Says Gonzales Presence Is ‘Harmful’
By DIANA JEAN SCHEMO
WASHINGTON, April 22 — Senator Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, the ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said Sunday that Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales’s failure to step down was “no doubt, bad for the Justice Department.”
Mr. Specter’s comments, made on the television program “Fox News Sunday,” reflected a growing lack of support for Mr. Gonzales among key Republicans on Capitol Hill as he faces accusations that the dismissals of eight United States attorneys were politically motivated.
Republicans made their anger at him clear in a blistering hearing over the dismissals on Thursday. In his testimony, Mr. Gonzales cited a faulty memory at least 50 times in responding to questions about the dismissals.
After the hearing, aides to Mr. Gonzales reportedly called the absence of a demand for his resignation from Mr. Specter a “positive barometer.” But Mr. Specter said Sunday that they were misreading him.
“I don’t think they should be celebrating that, because the attorney general’s testimony was very, very damaging to his own credibility,” he said. “Charges are being made that the Department of Justice was the political arm of the White House.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/23/washington/23gonzales.html?pagewanted=print