We're about to "enjoy" a quadrennial tradition. Yes, it's
political convention season.
These gatherings are all political theater, of course. The
candidates were selected months ago, and the speeches they'll give
will be approved by focus groups and filled with poll-tested
buzzwords. But, for the most part, that's all right. After all,
everyone recognizes the conventions for what they are: Harmless
displays of politics.
Still, that's not to say that all politics are harmless. In fact,
we're seeing an acceleration of partisan politics in Washington --
and it's a trend that may endanger us.
Because of partisan politics, the Bush administration hasn't
nominated a successor to George Tenet, who stepped down recently as
head of the Central Intelligence Agency. We all know we need to
shake up the CIA and generate better intelligence, as the final
report of the 9/11 commission makes clear. We were plagued by bad
intelligence and, as the commission put it, a "lack of imagination"
before 9/11 and in the run-up to the War in Iraq.
So we need a strong, competent CIA director. And we need one
quickly. Tenet's resignation gives us the perfect chance to appoint
that person.
The White House apparently planned to nominate Rep. Porter Goss, a
Florida Republican, for the position. Goss seems well qualified. A
former CIA officer, he chairs the House Permanent Select Committee
on Intelligence. He's frequently criticized the CIA, and since 9/11
he's worked to improve American intelligence-gathering techniques.
Plus, as a lawmaker, he could be expected to cruise through the
nomination process.
Not so fast. According to The Washington Post, the administration
declined to nominate Goss because senior Democrats consider him too
partisan. In fact, the newspaper reports, the president may wait
until after the election to name Tenet's successor, since
"Democrats threatened to turn a confirmation hearing for Goss or
any other nominee they consider too partisan into a review of the
Bush administration's prewar case for ousting Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein."
So reforming the CIA may have to wait until November, at the
earliest. And if President Bush loses, we'd have to wait until John
Kerry takes office to get a new CIA director. That could mean
January.
Imagine that. Up to six months, or more, without an intelligence
chief, even as our country remains at risk of a terrorist
attack.
Imagine that another terrorist attack occurs before a new director
is named. In that case, we can expect lawmakers to howl about why
we were unprepared. They'd surely call for hearings and demand that
heads roll. They'd conveniently ignore the fact that their own
partisan gamesmanship contributed to keeping us unprepared.
Partisan politics also have hijacked the judicial nomination
process. A handful of senators are blocking the will of the
majority by refusing to allow a full Senate vote on numerous
lower-court nominees, some of whom have been waiting years for a
vote. As former Attorney General Ed Meese recently
observed, "Never before in history has the Senate used a
filibuster to block the confirmation of a nominee that enjoyed
majority support."
Our courts are undermanned, partly because so many qualified
people have been waiting so long for a yes or no vote. That
probably doesn't matter to most people. After all, relatively few
of us need to go to federal court. However, we all depend on the
CIA to deliver quality intelligence. When it fails, we're all at
risk.
It used to be said, "politics stops at the water's edge." We must
work together to make that statement true again. So this summer,
even as Republicans and Democrats celebrate our political
differences at their conventions, let's remember we're all
Americans. To paraphrase Benjamin Franklin, if we won't hang
together, we might all end up hanging separately.
Ed Feulner is the president of The Heritage Foundation
(heritage.org), a Washington-based public policy research
institute.
COMMENTARY Political Process
Dangerous Delay
Jul 22, 2004 2 min read
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