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Is the DOMA Brief a Result of 'Burrowing'?

Category: Civil LibertiesConservatives
Posted on: June 15, 2009 11:15 AM, by Mike

A few months ago, Dday started to sound the alarm about "burrowing" by Bush administration appointees:

This is about getting civil service protections for hardcore conservative loyalists. In past transitions, this has been done to protect new rules or regulations that the outgoing President would like to see maintained, and that's true here as well. Recent rule changes in the Bureau of Land Management and the Fish and Wildlife Service will be harder to reverse with a champion inside the agency. But I hardly think it ends there. The same with all those career Justice Department officials whose political ideology was a factor in their hiring. And burrowing all of these officials at once will ultimately make it harder to root out the partisan career personnel who were hired into the civil service in the first place.

In a few years, we'll see some whistleblower on Hardball, talking gravely about corruption in the Obama Administration, and she'll be feted by the gasbags and made into a media darling. And nobody will notice the fact that she was hired by Monica Goodling.

It's also about creating mischief: the DOMA brief is a Republican operative's dream come true. After all, Obama is now being heavily criticized by his base. And there was no reason to write the opinion in the way that it was. The administration could have simply argued that their standing and jurisdiction were inappropriate. But, by using the same arguments used against interracial marriage, this brief was highly inflamatory.

I'm not saying that the appointee doesn't actually believe this--he very well might. But the brief could have been written a different way to achieve the same result. I truly doubt that the Obama administration wanted such an inflammatory statement, nor do I think that this is what Obama believes (although I don't think he's that gay friendly either). The Bush appointee had to know that this would not be an argument that would reflect well on the Obama administration--and that it was not the position of the administration.

This isn't to say that the Obama administration is at fault. If this was an instance of political 'dirty tricks', someone could have and should have caught this. But this is definitely just the beginning of what will come.

Hopefully, some people have learned a lesson from all of this.

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Comments

1

Nonsense. If the DOMA brief was the result of burrowing, it would have been repudiated by now. No - it happened because Obama is, as I pointed out several times before the election, more conservative than most senate or house democrats (who in turn are more conservative than most rank-and-file democrats).

Posted by: llewelly | June 15, 2009 12:15 PM

2

llewelly,

Making a case that is similar to that used to ban interracial marriage doesn't seem like an argument that Obama would feel comfortable with. Obama is more conservative than rank-and-file Dems (his aid to Wall Street makes that clear), but this argument seems to me a difference in kind, not degree.

If this is where Obama is on this issue, well then....

Posted by: Mike the Mad Biologist | June 15, 2009 1:54 PM

3

I absolutely agree. Obama has plenty on his plate between what's going on in iraq, afghanistan, pakistan, iran, agreements with Russia, the blowup in Georgia (the nation,not the state), the UK, rehabilitating the image of the US abroad, fixing the economy and doing something about regulating the financial industry, salvaging what's left of the auto industry, and health care. We know there are plenty of moles burrowed throughout the government, bushies made no attempt to hide that fact. Obama cannot personally supervise the work of every single lawyer in the justice dept., and IIRC, the brief writer WAS outed as a bushite mole. Will go look for the cite.

Posted by: thepoliticalcat | June 22, 2009 5:19 PM

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