Inside the brain of the smartest man in Washington

Impeaching William Jefferson Clinton, President of the United States

December 19th, 1998

Mr. PAUL. Mr. Speaker, I rise in support of all four articles of impeachment against the President. There is neither pleasure nor vindictiveness in this vote and I have found no one else taking this vote lightly. It seems though many of our colleagues are not pleased with the investigative process; some believing it to have been overly aggressive and petty, while others are convinced it has been unnecessarily limited and misdirected. It certainly raises the question of whether or not the special prosecutor rather than the Congress itself should be doing this delicate work of oversight. Strict adherence to the Constitution would reject the notion that Congress undermine the separations of power by delivering this oversight responsibility to the administration. The long delays and sharp criticisms of the special prosecutor could have been prevented if the Congress had not been dependent on the actions of an Attorney General’s appointee.

The charges against the President are serious and straight forward: lying, perjury, obstruction of justice, and abuse of power. The main argument made in his defense is that these charges surround the sexual escapades of the President and therefore should not be considered as serious as they otherwise would be.

But there are many people in this country and some members of Congress who sincerely believe we have over concentrated on the Lewinsky event while ignoring many other charges that have been pushed aside and not fully scrutinized by the House. It must not be forgotten that a resolution to inquire into the possible impeachment of the President was introduced two months before the nation became aware of Monica Lewinsky.

For nearly six years there has been a steady and growing concern about the legal actions of the President. These charges seem almost endless: possible bribery related to Webb Hubble, foreign government influence in the 1996 presidential election, military technology given to China, FBI files, travel office irregularities, and many others. Many Americans are not satisfied that Congress has fully investigated the events surrounding the deaths of Ron Brown and Vince Foster.

The media and the administration has concentrated on the sexual nature of the investigation and this has done a lot to distract from everything else. The process has helped to make the President appear to be a victim of government prosecutorial overkill while ignoring the odious significance of the 1,000 FBI files placed for political reasons in the White House. If corruption becomes pervasive in any administration, yet no actual fingerprints of the president are found on indicting documents, there must come a time when the ‘CEO’ becomes responsible for the actions of his subordinates. That is certainly true in business, the military, and in each congressional office.

There is a major irony in this impeachment proceeding. A lot has been said the last two months by members of the Judiciary Committee on both side of the aisle regarding the Constitution and how it must be upheld. But if we are witnessing all of a sudden the serious move toward obeying constitutional restraints, I will anxiously look forward to the next session when 80 percent of our routine legislation will be voted down.

But the real irony is that the charges coming out of the Paula Jones sexual harassment suit stem from an unconstitutional federal law that purports to promote good behavior in the work place. It’s based entirely on ignoring the obligations of the states to deal with physical abuse and intimidation. This whole mess resulted from a legal system institutionalized by the very same people who are not the President’s staunchest defenders. Without the federal sexual harassment code of conduct–which the President repeatedly flaunted–there would have been no case against the President since the many other serious charges have been brushed aside. I do not believe this hypocrisy will go unnoticed in the years to come. Hopefully it will lead to the day when the Congress reconsiders such legislation in light of the strict limitations placed on it by the Constitution and to which many members of Congress are now publicly declaring their loyalty.

Much has been said about the support the President continues to receive from the American people in spite of his acknowledged misconduct. It does seem that the polls and the recent election indicate the public is not inclined to remove the President from office nor reward the Republicans for their efforts to investigate the Lewinsky affair. It is quite possible as many have suggested that the current status of the economy has a lot to do with this tolerance.

The public’s acceptance of the President’s behavior may reflect the moral standards of our age, but I’m betting there’s a lot more to it. It is true that some conservative voters, demanding the Republicans in Congress hold the President to a greater accountability, ‘voted’ by staying home. They did not want to encourage the Republicans who were seen as being soft on Clinton for his personal behavior and for capitulating on the big government agenda of more spending, and more taxes. But hopefully there is a much more profound reason for the seemingly inconsistent position of a public who condemns the President while not having the stomach for punishing him through impeachment.

If my suspicion is correct we can claim a major victory. Polling across Texas, as well as nationally, confirms that more than 80 percent of the people are fearful of the Federal Government’s intrusion into our personal privacy. That’s a healthy sign and indicates that the privacy issue could be the issue that will eventually draw attention to the evils of big government.

The political contest, as it has always been throughout history, remains between the desire for security and the love for liberty. When economic security is provided by the government, privacy and liberty must be sacrificed. The longer a welfare state lasts the greater the conflict between government intrusiveness and our privacy. Government efficiency and need for its financing through a ruthless tax system prompts the perpetual barrage of government agents checking on everything we do.

Fortunately, the resentment toward government for its meddling in all aspects of our lives is strong and becoming more galvanized, and that should give us hope that all is not lost.

But this resentment must be channeled in the right direction. Belief that privacy and liberty can be protected while the welfare state is perpetuated through ever higher taxes is an unrealizable dream.

The ‘sympathy’, if that’s what we want to call it, for the President reflects the instinctive nature of most Americans who resent the prying eyes of big government. It’s easy to reason: ‘If the President of the United States can be the subject of a ‘sting operation’ and FBI ordered tape recordings, how can any of us be secure in our homes and papers?’

The ambivalence comes from fear that demanding privacy, even for the President, means that his actions are then condoned. And turning this into a perjury issue has been difficult.

The President, his advisors, and the friendly media were all aware that the sexual privacy issue would distract from the serious charges and knew it was their best chance to avoid impeachment.

But the President, this Administration and the Congress have all been hypocritical for demanding privacy for themselves yet are the arch enemies of our privacy. Although other Administrations have abused the FBI and the IRS, this Administration has systematically abused these powers like none other.

Let’s declare a victory in despite of the mess we’re in. The President is not likely to be removed from office. We’ll call it a form of ‘jury nullification’ and hope someday this process will be used in our courts to nullify the unconstitutional tax, monetary, gun, anti-privacy, and seizure laws that are heaped upon us by Congress, the President, and perpetuated by a judicial system devoid of respect for individual liberty and the Constitution.

Hopefully, the concept of the overly aggressive prosecutor will be condemned when it comes to overly aggressive activities of all the federal police agencies whether it’s the IRS, the BATF or any other authoritarian agency of the federal government.

A former U.S. Attorney, Robert Merkle, recently told the Pittsburgh Post Gazette that ‘the philosophy of (the Attorney General’s office) the last 10 to 15 years is whatever

works is right,’ when it comes to enforcing federal laws which essentially all are unconstitutional. It’s this attitude by the federal police agents that the American people must reject and not only when it applies to a particular President some want to shield.

Even though we might claim a victory of sorts, the current impeachment process reveals a defeat for our political system and our society. Since lack of respect for the Constitution is pervasive throughout the Administration, the Congress and the Courts and reflects the political philosophy of the past 60 years, dealing with the President alone, won’t reverse the course on which we find ourselves. There are days when I think we should consider ‘impeaching’ not only the President, but the Congress and the Judiciary. But the desired changes will come only after the people’s attitudes change as to what form of government they desire. When the people demand privacy, freedom and individual responsibility for everyone alike, our government will reflect these views. Hopefully we can see signs in these current events that more Americans are becoming serious about demanding their liberty and rejecting the illusions of government largesse as a panacea.

It’s sad but there is another example of a most egregious abuse of presidential power, committed by the President, that has gotten no attention by the special prosecutors or the Congress. That is the attempt by the President to distract from the Monica Lewinsky testimony to the Grand Jury by bombing with cruise missiles both Sudan and Afghanistan, and the now current war against Iraq.

Two hundred million dollars were spent on an illegal act of war against innocent people. The pharmaceutical plant in Sudan was just that, a pharmaceutical plant, owned by a Muslim businessman who was standing up to the Islamic fundamentalists, the same people we pretend to oppose and use as scapegoats for all our Middle-Eastern policies. And now we have the controversial and unconstitutional waging of war in Iraq.

And to add insult to injury both military operations ordered by Clinton were quickly praised by the Republican leaders as good and necessary policy. These acts alone should be enough for a serious consideration of impeachment, but it’s never mentioned–mainly because leadership of both parties for decades have fully endorsed our jingoism and bellicosity directed toward other nations when they do not do our bidding.

Yes, the President’s tawdry affair and the acceptance of it to a large degree by the American people is not a good sign for us as a nation. But, let’s hope that out of this we have a positive result by recognizing the public’s rejection of the snooping actions of Big Brother. Let’s hope there’s a renewed interest in the Constitution and that Congress pays a lot more attention to it on a daily basis especially when it comes to waging war.

The fact that President Clinton will most likely escape removal from office I find less offensive than the Congress’s and the media’s lack of interest in dealing with the serious charges of flagrant abuse of power, threatening political revenge, issuing unconstitutional Executive Orders, sacrificing U.S. sovereignty to world government, bribery, and illegal acts of war, along with the routine flaunting of the constitutional restraints that were placed there to keep our government small and limited in scope.

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Ron Paul votes for Impeachment

December 19th, 1998

WASHINGTON, DC — In voting for all four Articles of Impeachment today, US Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) said he did so because the charges are “serious and straight forward: lying, perjury, obstructions of justice and abuse of power.”

Rep. Paul placed a statement in the Record during debate. In that statement, he said that while the process is flawed, no one should remain above the law.

“(M)any of our colleagues are not pleased with the investigative process; some believing it to have been overly aggressive and petty, while others are convinced it has been unnecessarily limited and misdirected. It certainly raises the question of whether or not the special prosecutor rather than the Congress itself should be doing this delicate work of oversight,” wrote Rep. Paul. “The long delays and sharp criticism of the special prosecutor could have been prevented if Congress had not been dependent on the actions of an Attorney General’s appointee.”

For as serious as the charges listed in the Articles are, Rep. Paul wrote in his statement that more serious crimes should have been more thoroughly investigated.

“The process has helped make the President appear to be a victim of government prosecutorial overkill while ignoring the odious significance of the 1,000 FBI files placed for political reasons in the White House.” Rep. Paul also cited mounting evidence of illegal campaign contributions given to the president’s 1996 campaign by the communist Chinese government in exchange for secret military technology.

“There is a major irony in this impeachment proceeding. A lot has been said the last two months by members of the Judiciary Committee on both sides of the aisle regarding the Constitution and how it must be upheld. But if we are witnessing… a serious move toward obeying the constitutional restraints, I will anxiously look forward to the next session when 80 percent of our routine legislation will be voted down.”

Rep. Paul said that he believes the public’s perceived disgust with the process is most likely a reflection their disdain for “government’s intrusion into our personal privacy,” and not an endorsement of this administration.

“The President, this Administration and the Congress have been hypocritical for demanding privacy for themselves yet are the arch enemies of our privacy. Although other Administrations have abused the FBI and IRS, this Administration has systematically abused these powers like none other.”

Rep. Paul also condemned the president for initiating military action against foreign nations to divert attention from his personal problems, first, in attacking a legitimate pharmaceutical plant in Sudan on the day Monica Lewinsky testified before a Grand Jury, and the second, last week when he attacked Iraq to delay impeachment.

“Those acts alone should be enough for a serious consideration of impeachment, but it’s never mentioned — mainly because leadership of both parties for decades have fully endorsed our jingoism and bellicosity directed toward other nations when they do not do our bidding.”

Rep. Paul said that while he believes this President must be removed from office quickly, he is doubtful the Senate will do so.

“The fact that president Clinton will most likely escape removal from office I find less offensive than the Congress’ and media’s lack of interest in dealing with the serious charges of flagrant abuse of power, threatening political revenge, issuing unconstitutional Executive Orders, sacrificing US sovereignty to world government, bribery, and illegal acts of war, along with the routine flaunting of the constitutional restraints that were placed there to keep our federal government small and limited in scope.”

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Clinton endangers troops to end-run impeachment

December 16th, 1998

WASHINGTON, DC — As US troops prepared to once again be used as political pawns by the President, Rep. Ron Paul called on Bill Clinton to resign for the good of the country and the safety of American soldiers.

“Once again President Clinton is using American troops to deflect attention from his record of lies, distortions, obstruction of justice and abuse of power,” said Rep. Paul after arriving in Washington on Wednesday afternoon. “Just a couple months ago, the president launched an attack against the nation of Sudan in an attempt to cover over his personal problems; an attack which we know now had no basis whatsoever in protecting US interests.”

Paul said the Clinton ruse with Iraq is not only shameful, but recklessly dangerous.

“Even if one can look past the constitutional prohibition against the US policing the world, the timing of this new attack against Iraq screams of hypocrisy by a president who has shown a complete disregard for our military, our Constitution and our national defense,” said Rep. Paul, a former Air Force flight surgeon. “Iraq has been ‘disobeying’ the United Nations for years now, but suddenly, on the verge of his impeachment, this president decides to launch an attack, in essence an unconstitutional declaration of war.”

Rep. Paul said that it is “despicable for a man who ran from military service to now use soldiers as a shield from impeachment.”

“How many American soldiers and innocent Iraqi children will die so that this president can hide from justice? How many American citizens are now at increased risk from terrorist attack because of this president? How much innocent blood will have to flow to cover this president’s sins? This attack has no basis in protecting our national security and only increases the danger to our people.”

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The Articles of Impeachment

December 15th, 1998

WASHINGTON, DC — US Rep. Ron Paul has issued the following statement regarding his position on the pending Articles of Impeachment of the President:

“No one should be proud of the impeachment proceedings of the past year. The tawdry behavior of the president makes even his most staunch defenders wince as the gory details of his sexual escapades are revealed to a public disgusted by the entire process. I believe that disgust is directed at the continued trend in our nation toward a federal government that pries into the most private aspects of our lives.

“The American public is further disgusted by the sheer hypocrisy of the Clinton Administration and the Congress. While this President and Congress continue to pass and enact laws that slowly deprive Americans of more privacy, Mr. Clinton complains loudly that his privacy is being violated in this process, that he should be left alone. Note, of course, that this ‘right to be left alone’ is good for him, but not the millions of Americans whose privacy he allows agencies under his control to violate almost at whim.

“This Administration has been among the most aggressive in using federal prosecutors and agency regulators to attack Americans’ liberties and privacy; take cases and regulations of the FDIC, the EPA, the BATF and the IRS, for example. However, this President is upset that an aggressive prosecutor and congressional committee have peered into his life on the basis of the same statutes and processes he staunchly supports.

“For all the time we are spending on issues that are at best difficult to discuss in polite company, the debate is all but ignoring the most important of constitutional issues. Nowhere do we find questioning of the assumed power of a president to send our troops into battle, despite the Constitution’s requirement that all wars be declared by Congress. It should be remembered that just a few short months ago this president ordered an unprovoked attack on the sovereign nation of Sudan in an apparent attempt to deflect attention from his domestic problems.

“Nowhere in this impeachment debate do we hear concerns about the promulgation of Executive Orders, which run contrary to our Constitution. Where is the questioning of the appropriateness of increasing numbers of executive-branch employees being allowed to bear weapons in their daily work? Why do so few seem concerned about a president who, it appears, traded military technology with the communist Chinese for campaign donations? Or who improperly accessed hundreds of confidential FBI files for partisan purposes?

“With neither pleasure nor vindictiveness, I will cast my votes in favor of each of the Articles of Impeachment, for I have regretfully come to the conclusion that President Clinton must be impeached by the House, and removed from office by the Senate. The Rule of Law demands that presidents abide by the same legal codes as the people; obstructions of justice and abuses of power cannot be tolerated, even in the most minute of cases. I am sorry these Articles will not include the far more serious abuses of which many presidents have been guilty. Of course, such action would require a deep commitment to our Constitution and it’s requirement for a limited, non-intrusive federal government. Sadly, though, that is a commitment few in Congress wish to make.”

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