Kaleidoscope
By Perry
Diaz
“McCarthyism,” which was
coined after Republican U.S. Senator Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin, is the
practice of making accusations of disloyalty, subversion, or treason without
proper regard for evidence. It also means making unfair
allegations or using unfair investigative techniques, especially in order to
restrict dissent or political criticism. It lasted from
1950 to 1956. (Source: Wikipedia)
Today, McCarthyism has taken
a broader meaning. In general, it is now used “to describe
reckless, unsubstantiated accusations, as well as demagogic attacks on the
character or patriotism of political adversaries.” Sounds
familiar, eh?
Indeed, the Republicans in
Congress are using this modern form of McCarthyism to target their political
opponents, particularly President Barack Obama and former Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton. And just like McCarthy, they conducted
congressional hearings and investigations. These latter-day
followers of the McCarthy creed are trying to make President Barack Obama and
former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton look like ducks, walk like ducks, and
quack like ducks. But this time around, they’re not witch-hunting
for communists but how to implicate Obama and Clinton to a number of scandals.
In my article,
“Benghazi Syndrome” (May 18, 2013), I wrote: “Within
days of the Benghazi attack, McCain led a smear campaign against U.S. Ambassador
to the United Nations Susan Rice. They attacked Rice’s Benghazi ‘talking
points,’ accusing her of withholding information to cover up the real story.
They demanded an investigation and vowed to block Rice’s confirmation in the
Senate should President Barack Obama appoint her as Secretary of State. Well,
Rice did not give them that chance; she withdrew from being considered for an
appointment.
“The virulent strain of
the Benghazi Syndrome spread to the House of Representatives. Rep. Darrell Issa,
Chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, and four other
House committee chairmen conducted their own investigations. Former Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton, former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, and Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff Martin Dempsey gave countless hours of testimony. The
State Department sent more than 25,000 pages of documents to Congress. And yet
Issa and the other witch hunters would not let up on their beliefs that the
Obama administration is covering up something and they want to hear the true
story of l’affaire Benghazi.” Sounds
familiar, eh?
Scandal
fever
Last May 13, former Vice
President Dick Cheney appeared on the Sean Hannity Show to discuss the Benghazi
attack and the scandals plaguing the Obama Administration. On the
Benghazi incident, Cheney commented: “One of the worst incidents I can recall
in my career… If they told the truth about Benghazi that it was a terrorist
attack by a terrorist affiliated group it would have destroyed a false image of
competence that was the basis for his campaign for reelection.”
Huh?
What was Cheney talking
about? Didn’t Obama call the Benghazi attack an “act of terror” at
a press briefing the day after the attack? Isn’t a “terrorist
attack” an “act of terror”? It’s all semantics. So,
what’s Cheney’s problem? Perhaps he’s afflicted with “scandal
fever,” a contagious strain that mimics the symptoms of dementia.
And contagious it was! Within a few days, Rep. Darrell Issa
used the same “terrorist attack” vs. “act of terror” argument during a media
interview on Capitol Hill.
Ratings
up!
Recently, Obama’s rating
bumped up from 51% in an April poll to 53% in a poll conducted last May 17-18.
With all these scandals, you would think that Obama’s rating would plummet down.
Doesn’t that prove to show that most Americans are not falling for
the McCarthyist games the Republicans are playing?
In spite of the scandals
that are hounding the Obama administration, the Republicans have yet to find the
“duck test” that they could use against Obama and Clinton.
But they’re not giving up.
The witch-hunt has reached fever pitch! Speaker John Boehner
started talking about impeaching Obama. When he was asked what are
the grounds for impeachment, he couldn’t give any specific impeachable
offense. However, he replied that they’d find something to nail
him down during the impeachment process. Sounds familiar,
eh?
The question is: Can Obama
weather the storm until the spring of 2014 when the mid-term election season
kicks off? In my opinion, I believe he’d not only survive it; he’d
thrive on it for as long as they fail to implicate him to the scandals.
And so far, they don’t have an iota of evidence that would prove their
complicity to these scandals.
Déjà vu
This whole charade reminds
me of the impeachment of then-President Bill Clinton in December 1998 for four
charges, to wit: two charges of perjury, obstruction of justice, abuse of
power. The charges arose from the Monica Lewinsky scandal and the
Paula Jones lawsuit.
The Republican-controlled
House of Representatives impeached Clinton on one charge of perjury and
obstruction of justice. However, the Senate acquitted him in
February 1999. Although the Republicans controlled the Senate with
a 55-vote majority, the Republicans were 17 votes short of the required
two-third majority for a conviction.
If impeachment charges were
brought before the House of Representatives against Obama, the
Republican-controlled House would be able to impeach Obama since only a simple
majority is needed for impeachment.
The Senate vote would
probably mirror the 1999 vote in reverse. Today, there are 53
Democrats, two Independents, and 45 Republicans. To convict
Obama, the Senate needs all 45 Republican and 22 Democrats/Independents, which
is improbable simply because that is political reality.
And the political reality is
that unless Obama has really screwed up to a point where Democrats would abandon
him and feed him to the vultures, the impeachment process that Speaker Boehner
had in mind was nothing more than an exercise in futility.
Then what?
In 2000, the Republicans retained control of the House of Representatives. However, they had a net loss of two seats from the previous elections. With George W. Bush winning the presidency by five electoral votes; however, he lost the popular vote to Democrat Al Gore by 0.5% of the vote.
In 2000, the Republicans retained control of the House of Representatives. However, they had a net loss of two seats from the previous elections. With George W. Bush winning the presidency by five electoral votes; however, he lost the popular vote to Democrat Al Gore by 0.5% of the vote.
Quo vadis,
Republicans?
In the 2014 elections, the
Democrats need 17 seats to retake the House while the Republicans need six seats
to retake the Senate. However, unless either party gets a super
majority of 60 seats, the Senate would face another unproductive term.
But as far as impeaching and
removing Obama from office is concerned, the Republicans should call it quits
and concentrate on the 2016 presidential election. And the
candidate to beat is Democrat Hillary Clinton. Could any of the
Tea Partiers – Rand Paul, Marco Rubio or Paul Ryan – beat her?
Now, you can see why the Republicans are trying so hard to get their
ducks in a row to bring down Clinton.
At the end of the day, the
scandal fever that is afflicting Republicans could relegate the Grand Old Party
of Abraham Lincoln to political impotence.