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This article originally provided by
The Washington Post
January 25, 2006
Mr. Abramoff's Meetings
HERE ARE SOME things we know about Jack Abramoff and the
White House: The disgraced lobbyist raised at least $100,000
for President Bush's reelection campaign. He had
long-standing ties to Karl Rove, a key presidential adviser.
He had extensive dealings with executive branch officials
and departments -- one of whom, former procurement chief
David H. Safavian, has been charged by federal prosecutors
with lying to investigators about his involvement with Mr.
Abramoff.
We also know that Mr. Abramoff is an admitted crook who
was willing to bribe members of Congress and their staffs to
get what he (or his clients) wanted. In addition to
attending a few White House Hanukkah parties and other
events at which he had his picture snapped with the
president, Mr. Abramoff had, according to the White House,
"a few staff-level meetings" with White House aides.
Here is what we don't know about Jack Abramoff and the
White House: whom he met with and what was discussed. Nor,
if the White House sticks to its current position, will we
learn that anytime soon. Press secretary Scott McClellan
told the White House press corps: "If you've got some
specific issue that you need to bring to my attention, fine.
But what we're not going to do is engage in a fishing
expedition that has nothing to do with the investigation."
This is not a tenable position. It's undisputed that Mr.
Abramoff tried to use his influence, and his restaurant and
his skyboxes and his chartered jets, to sway lawmakers and
their staffs. Information uncovered by Mr. Bush's own
Justice Department shows that Mr. Abramoff tried to do the
same inside the executive branch.
Under these circumstances, asking about Mr. Abramoff's
White House meetings is no mere exercise in reportorial
curiosity but a legitimate inquiry about what an admitted
felon might have been seeking at the highest levels of
government. Whatever White House officials did or didn't do,
there is every reason to believe that Mr. Abramoff was up to
no good and therefore every reason the public ought to know
with whom he was meeting.
Mr. McClellan dismisses requests for the information as
an effort to play "partisan politics," and no doubt there is
more than an element of partisanship in Democrats' efforts
to extract this information. But Republicans wouldn't stand
for this kind of stonewalling if the situation were
reversed. We can say that with confidence because history
proves it. During the 1996 scandal over foreign fundraising
in the Clinton White House, Republicans demanded -- and
obtained, though not without a fight -- extensive
information about White House coffees and other meetings,
including photos and videotapes.
"Any suggestion by critics or anybody else to suggest
that the president was doing something nefarious with Jack
Abramoff is absolutely wrong, and it's absurd," presidential
adviser Dan Bartlett said on NBC's "Today" show. The best
way to refute such "absurd" suggestions is to get all of Mr.
Abramoff's dealings with the Bush White House and the Bush
administration out in the open -- now.
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