Ron Radosh

By Ron Radosh

Bio

Get Updates From Ron Radosh

Holder for Attorney-General: Left v. Right

November 19, 2008 - 12:21 pm - by Ron Radosh

It is beginning to appear that President-elect Barack Obama’s nomination of Eric Holder as Attorney General is going to become a classic conservative-liberal split, with conservatives opposing him and liberals offering their support. In what is now appearing to be the staffing of the third Clinton Administration, Holder’s nomination is likely to be the most controversial.

On these pages, Roger Kimball has already linked to NRO’s important editorial citing the evidence indicating that Holder is “a conventional, check-the-boxes creature of the Left.” Holder, they point out, supported hate crime legislation, affirmative action and the interference with prosecutions by charging police departments with making arrests by racial profiling. Most important of all was his work in the last minute pardon of Marc Rich by Bill Clinton, made right before he left office as President.

Not only did Holder carry out an end-run around the standard pardon process, he did the same when it came to advising Clinton to pardon terrorists. Clinton commuted the sentence of 16 Puerto Rican members of the FALN, including those who had tried to kill President Harry S. Truman at Blair House. As the National Review editors note, these pardons were meant to help Hillary Clinton in her Senate race in New York City, because it would cement her ability to get the Puerto Rican vote.

But Clinton also pardoned two members of the Weather Underground, Susan Rosenberg and Linda Evans, who were serving long terms for bombings of American government facilities. Had Bill Ayers been in jail too, and not managed to avoid prosecution, he undoubtedly would also have received a pardon.

Now, on the website of The New Republic,  their legal editor and prominent law school professor, Jeffrey Rosen, endorses Holden as a first-rate choice who “has impeccable credentials as a tough-on-crime prosecutor and superior court judge appointed  by Ronald Reagan.” The information that he was a Reagan appointment is meant to show Holder’s bi-partisanship. Rosen does not comment in his web posting on any of the issues discussed by NRO’s editors. Instead, he cites his support of Clinton’s program to hire 100,000 more police officers, and his support of “community prosecution and community outreach programs” to connect prosecutors with the citizens they serve.  And he notes that Holder will also question “the racially discriminatory impact of some sentencing policies;”  which could mean if read correctly that valid sentences could be reduced or thrown out on dubious grounds.

Is Holder really, as Rosen argues, the man who will resurrect Justice “as an institution above politics?” Rosen has a point when he talks about Alberto Gonzales having wrecked impartiality at the Department and a need to restore “the professionalism of prosecutors.” But is the man who helped pardon Marc Rich and members of the FALN and the Weather Underground the man to accomplish these aims? Somehow, I do not share Rosen’s confidence that under Holder, decisions will be made “on the merits rather than for partisan reasons.”

PJ Media appreciates your comments that abide by the following guidelines:

1. Avoid profanities or foul language unless it is contained in a necessary quote or is relevant to the comment.

2. Stay on topic.

3. Disagree, but avoid ad hominem attacks.

4. Threats are treated seriously and reported to law enforcement.

5. Spam and advertising are not permitted in the comments area.

These guidelines are very general and cannot cover every possible situation. Please don't assume that PJ Media management agrees with or otherwise endorses any particular comment. We reserve the right to filter or delete comments or to deny posting privileges entirely at our discretion. Please note that comments are reviewed by the editorial staff and may not be posted immediately. If you feel your comment was filtered inappropriately, please email us at story@pjmedia.com.

4 Comments, 4 Threads

  1. 1. JED

    The Marc Rich case should stand in the foreground. The Marc Rich case should be treated like plutonium. The evidence against him and his presidential pardon has been properly obfuscated. Eric Holden was instrumental in that pardon. To name Holden the A.G. is questionable at best and a travisty of justice within reasonable doubt at the worst. To entitle someone as the first black office holder is racism. Tell me that Holden was at the top of the talent list and not somebodies favor.

  2. 2. jack simms

    holder is perfect—a veteran prosecutor who can both prosecute people and turn around and help to pardon them without breaking stride—clintonian flexibility to the max

  3. 3. Professor Guvinof

    Think of how the FBI agents were insulted by the Marc Rich pardon after having worked so hard for so long to prepare the prosecution of this very difficult case. Does that remind anyone of how the military must have felt in 1992 after getting a commander-in-chief who had so brilliantly demonstrated his supreme dodging talents? Clinton 3.0 anyone?

  4. 4. David Thomson

    Eric Holder essentially believes in his heart of hearts that blacks have more legal rights than white. It’s all about “pay back” for past injustices. He will most assuredly prosecute white collar defendants ruthlessly while ignoring the scoundrels associated with ACORN. Vote fraud is now a Democratic Party specialty—and Holder will do nothing to correct the abuses. His selection will only push us quicker into a fascist dictatorship.

Leave a Reply

Click here to subscribe to the Daily Digest, to stay up to date with the latest at PJ Media. (You will be sent an email asking you to verify your email address. If you have previously subscribed, no verification email will be sent.)