Late Spring Cleaning
This entry was posted on 5/26/2006 3:50 PM and is filed under Amendment Suggestions.
One would think that agreeing with your liberal minded Congressional nemesis might sound your internal conservative alarm bells. Not in the case of Speaker Hastert's recent romp to the White House to complain about the FBI searching the Capitol Hill office of Rep. Jefferson with a warrant provided by a federal judge. One would have thought from the Speaker's reaction that the FBI was breaking into the Congressman's office in the middle of the night without a warrant to snoop for damaging evidence of secret democratic party plans to take control of Texas.
The primary argument put forth by the Speaker of the House and other out-of-touch long-term legislators in Washington D.C. was that this had never happened before in the Constitution's 219-year history and it was an infringement on the separation of powers between the Executive and Legislative branches. Never happening before was probably something that the congressman from Louisiana, Mr. Jefferson, was counting on after investigators found $95,000 hidden in his freezer at his home in August 2005 that matched the serial numbers of the $100 bills that the Congressman accepted from an undercover FBI agent.
And yes for the moment I'll skip past wondering why it takes the FBI 9 months "after" finding the money hidden in the Congressman's home before they decide to search his office. Sounds like plenty of out-of-line respect for a member of Congress...yet again.
There should be no thought on the part of the FBI or any other investigating unit about giving a member of Congress some slack when investigating suspected wrong-doing. The history of not searching a member of Congress' office before last weekend just proves that it's long overdue. I wonder how many cartons were moved out of offices this week collectively by all members of Congress. Probably just some late spring cleaning.
The new careerism job of Congress must be changed so that we elect more people that were not offended by the FBI searching a suspected and probably soon to be indicted Congressman's office. Changing the Constitution so that members of Congress have limited term-limits is the best way to reduce federal spending by both political parties, reduce the impact of lobbyists, and bring about better governing.
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