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Politics : Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (60434)4/28/2005 7:40:26 AM
From: longnshortRespond to of 81568
 
Spanish mayor rejects gay 'weddings'

By Estelle Shirbon
REUTERS NEWS AGENCY

MADRID -- A Spanish mayor has announced that he will refuse to apply a new law allowing same-sex couples to "marry," a stand likely to please the Roman Catholic Church but give the Socialist government a headache.
    The Spanish parliament last week gave initial approval to the new law -- to the outrage of church authorities who have labeled homosexual "marriage" harmful to society and have urged mayors not to perform same-sex "weddings."
    "I intend not to exercise this right [to marry same-sex couples] and not to delegate it to other municipal officials," Valladolid Mayor Francisco Javier Leon de la Riva was quoted as saying in local newspapers Tuesday.
    "If the law forces me [to marry homosexual couples], I shall object on the grounds of conscience," said Mr. Leon de la Riva, of the center-right Popular Party, which is considered close to the Catholic Church.
    Other mayors appeared poised to follow Mr. Leon de la Riva's lead, and his counterpart in Avila, Miguel Angel Garcia Nieto, which is also in central Spain, praised him for his "manly stand."
    Lluis Fernando Caldentey, mayor of Pontons in the Catalonia region, said that same-sex "marriage" was immoral and that homosexuals were "defective." The Popular Party said it had suspended him from the party for his comments.
    Madrid Municipal Council member Ana Botella, wife of former Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar, last week joined the civic leaders who refuse to conduct same-sex "marriage," Agence France-Presse reported.
    But many conservative mayors of big cities, among them Alberto Ruiz Gallardon of Madrid and Rita Barbera of Valencia, said they would respect the law.
    The Socialist government said it expected everyone, especially public officials, to comply with the law that allows same-sex couples to "wed" in civil ceremonies, not in church.
    The law "does not affect freedom of conscience, nor does it have anything to do with religion or with a religious sacrament," said Justice Minister Juan Fernando Lopez Aguilar.
    The Socialist government repeatedly has angered the church in its first year in power, not just with its homosexual "marriage" plans but also by easing abortion restrictions, making it easier to divorce and permitting stem-cell research.
    Opinion polls show that most Spaniards support allowing same-sex couples to "marry," but the measure has come under sustained fire from the church and from the conservative Popular Party.
    Cardinal Alfonso Lopez Trujillo, head of the Vatican's Pontifical Council for the Family, branded the law "inhuman" and challenged state officials to refuse to apply it.
    Pope John Paul II last year rebuked Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero over the plan to legalize homosexual "marriage."
    Yesterday, homosexual rights groups reacted with fury after a Spanish cardinal compared obedience to laws on same-sex "marriage" to the process that led to the creation of Nazi death camps.
    "If you give obedience to the law priority over obedience to your conscience, that leads to Auschwitz," Cardinal Ricard Maria Carles, former archbishop of Barcelona, told a Spanish television station.
    



To: American Spirit who wrote (60434)4/28/2005 10:45:54 AM
From: Sully-Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 81568
 
Kerry involved in dirty tricks to protect the Clinton legacy?

Cover Up???

By Tony Snow

Senators Byron Dorgan, John Kerry and Richard Durbin pulled a fast one last week on their congressional colleagues. They tried to bury forever documents alleging that senior government officials tried to transform portions of the IRS and the Justice Department into a goon squad for attacking political enemies and aiding political friends.

Naturally, they didn’t declare their intentions openly.
Instead, Sen. Dorgan attached an innocent looking amendment to the Emergency Supplemental Appropriations bill that will fund government operations after September 30. The last-minute amendment read:

“At the end of the bill, add the following:

“SEC. __ . (a) None of the funds appropriated or made available in this Act or any other ACT may be used to fund the independent counsel investigation of Henry Cisneros after June 1, 2005.

“(b) Not later than July 1, 2005, the Government Accountability Office (sic) shall provide the Committee on Appropriations of each House with a detailed accounting of the costs associated with the independent counsel investigation of Henry Cisneros.”

Before detailing the sleight of hand, let’s consider the background. Former FBI Director Louis Freeh insisted on the appointment of an Independent Counsel in 1995 after learning that then-Housing and Urban Development Secretary Henry Cisneros shuttled payments to his mistress without reporting them to the IRS. Once the news went public, Cisneros resigned from office, his previously promising political career in tatters. He later admitted to a misdemeanor and paid a fine of $10,000. President Clinton pardoned him in 2001.

Dorgan’s bill would shut down the 10-year probe conducted by Independent Counsel David Barrett’s investigation, but it would add something unprecedented in the case of special or independent counsels: it would prevent the publication of the counsel’s report on the case. A decade’s worth of investigations — sworn testimony, documentation of alleged abuses, grand-jury proceedings, etc. — would vanish without a trace.

In this instance, that would mean burying charges that key officials in the Justice Department and the IRS abused their power by going easy on Cisneros and targeting political opponents of Bill Clinton. Those charges — not the Cisneros case — have served as the focal point of Barrett’s investigation for the last several years. While Senator Dorgan and his colleagues may not know this, lawyers for Henry Cisneros and other Clinton-era public servants do. They also know that Barrett is the first man ever to receive grand-jury subpoena power to look at the inner workings of the IRS.


A Dorgan press release summarizes the senator’s case for quashing the report: “The Independent Counsel was appointed ten years ago, but has failed to file a report and continues to spend millions of dollars, despite the fact that the subject long ago resigned from office, pled guilty to a misdemeanor, paid a $10,000 fine, and received a presidential pardon.”

The argument has unmistakable appeal, especially since Barrett has gotten less bang for the buck than any previous independent counsel (one conviction for $20 million dollars).

Nevertheless, the claim is misleading. Barrett isn’t responsible for dragging out the investigation or adding to its cost. As the Wall Street Journal noted in an April 22 editorial, “any blame for this delay lies mainly with Mr. Cisneros’ lawyers at Williams and Connolly, who have filed more than 190 motions and appeals; one single appeal took some 18 months to deal with. The 400-page-plus report has been largely done since last August, and awaits only a requisite period for review and response by those named in its pages. The only thing threatening a hold-up past June are further defense motions seeking still more delay.”

Barrett also stands accused of wasting money, even though he has claimed in a letter to members of Congress: “This Office undergoes a complete GAO audit not once, but twice a year, to which we provide full assistance and cooperation. I have never received a complaint from the GAO. To my knowledge, the only person to whom a GAO official expressed a concern was to a Washington Post reporter for a Washington Post article on April 1, 2005. The Washington Post article was relied upon by Senator Dorgan in introducing SA 399.”

Yet, even if Barrett were profligate, wouldn’t the public have a right to know whether government officials abused the IRS and its extraordinary powers for political purposes? Why not insist on publishing the report, and conducting a GAO audit of the independent counsel, rather than singling out the counsel while burning his work?

This gets us to the heart of the issue: Senators Dorgan, Kerry and Durbin have been lured into sponsoring a cover-up of what could be a hair-raising case of governmental malfeasance. As the Journal noted, “abuse of the taxing power is about as serious as corruption can get in our democracy.”

One would assume that senators of any party not only would want to know more about allegations of this sort, but would insist on going after agents responsible for such a breach of the public trust, especially if the bad actors worked for the IRS, Justice Department or the White House. After all, once a federal agency decides to engage in political chicanery, it’s not likely to stop just because an administration changes.

Whatever abuses Barrett may have found in the Clinton era very well could persist into this administration, only with a pro-Republican tilt. Yet, the sponsors of the midnight amendment have adopted the Sgt. Shultz defense: They know nothing — and they want the American public clothed in ignorance as well. (Compare this behavior to the alacrity with which Senate Democrats have retailed unsworn, over-the-transom complaints about John Bolton.)

The Dorgan-Kerry-Durbin amendment made it past Democratic and Republican Senators because they had no idea the trio had added the cover-up language to a measure that, among other things, finances continuing military and humanitarian operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. Fortunately, Congress still has an opportunity to ensure that the Barrett report sees the light of day. Members of the House-Senate conference, which must produce a final version of the appropriations bill for the president’s signature, still can strip out the report-killing amendment.


Here is a list of names and phone numbers for the House and Senate conferees:

Senate:

Sen. Thad Cochran — (202) 224-5054
Sen. Ted Stevens — (202) 224-3004
Sen. Arlen Specter — (202) 224-4254
Sen. Pete Domenici — (202) 224-6621
Sen. Kit Bond — (202) 224-5721
Sen. Mitch McConnell — (202) 224-2541
Sen. Conrad Burns — (202) 224-2644
Sen. Richard Shelby — (202) 224-5744
Sen. Judd Gregg — (202) 224-3324
Sen. Robert Bennett — (202) 224-5444
Sen. Larry Craig— (202) 224-2752
Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison — (202) 224-5922
Sen. Michael DeWine — (202) 224-2315
Sen. Sam Brownback — (202) 224-6521
Sen. Wayne Allard — (202) 224-5941
Sen. Robert Byrd — (202) 224-3954
Sen. Daniel Inouye — (202) 224-3934
Sen. Patrick Leahy — (202) 224-4242
Sen. Tom Harkin — (202) 224-3254
Sen. Barbara Mikulski — (202) 224-4654
Sen. Harry Reid — (202) 224-3542
Sen. Herb Kohl — (202) 224-5653
Sen. Patty Murray — (202) 224-2621
Sen. Byron Dorgan — (202) 224-2551
Sen. Diane Feinstein — (202) 224-3841
Sen. Richard Durbin — (202) 224-2152
Sen. Tim Johnson — (202) 224-5842
Sen. Mary Landrieu — (202) 224-5824

House:

Jerry Lewis (CA, 41st District) — (202) 225-5861
C.W. Bill Young (FL, 10th District) — (202) 225-5961
Ralph Regula (OH, 16th District) — (202) 225-3059
Hal Rogers (KY, 5th District) — (202) 225-4601
Frank Wolf (VA, 10th District) — (202) 225-5136
Jim Kolbe (AZ, 8th District) — (202) 225-2542
James T. Walsh (NY, 25th District) — (202) 225-3701
Charles H. Taylor (NC, 11th District) — (202) 225-6401
Dave Hobson (OH, 7th District) — (202) 225-4324
Henry Bonilla (TX, 23rd District) — (202) 225-4511
Joe Knollenberg (MI, 9th District) — (202) 225-5802
Dave Obey (WI, 7th District) — (202) 225-3365
John P. Murtha (PA, 12th District) — (202) 225-2065
Norman D. Dicks (WA, 6th District) — (202) 225-5916
Martin Olav Sabo (MN, 5th District) — (202) 225-4755
Alan B. Mollohan (WV, 1st District) — (202) 225-4172
Peter J. Visclosky (IN, 1st District) — (202) 225-2461
Nita M. Lowey (NY, 18th District) — (202) 225-6506

Share your thoughts with Tony. E-mail him at tonysnow@foxnews.com.

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