More Double Standards From The Chatteratti

I’m kind of amazed at the latest kerfuffle about the firing of the six US attorneys. As has been noted multiple times, they serve at the pleasure of the president. The only unorthodox thing about it, as far as I can tell, is the loophole that would allow them to be replaced absent Senate confirmation. And there seems to be a certain lack of ingenuousness in some of the reporting on it. For instance, in the piece at Slate, note this graf:

This kind of purge is legal but unprecedented. A recent report by the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service revealed that since 1981, no more than three U.S. attorneys had ever been forced out under similar circumstances. And now we have six in a day? What’s going on?

Unprecedented? Really? We’ll come back to that in a moment.

Note the emphasis, which is mine. What does “under similar circumstances” mean? Well, if one follows the link to the CRA report, it turns out that it means “having served less than a four-year term.” But why is it so awful for a president to remove his own appointee? The CRA report doesn’t count those removed as a result of an administration change.

Which gets us to the “unprecedented” rhetoric. Where was all the fuss and bother in 1993, when Janet Reno fired every single US attorney bar one (over ninety of them) in a single day? As Judge Bork noted:

She was not in charge from the beginning. Upon taking office, in an unexplained departure from the practice of recent Administrations, Miss Reno suddenly fired all 93 U.S. attorneys. She said the decision had been made in conjunction with the White House. Translation: The President ordered it. Just as the best place to hide a body is on a battlefield, the best way to be rid of one potentially troublesome attorney is to fire all of them. The U.S. attorney in Little Rock was replaced by a Clinton protege.

Just as Whitewater was heating up. Just a coinkydinky, one can be sure.

Yet I don’t recall it being such a big deal at the time. In fact, it’s hard to find much reportage on it from the era (something that caused some of my commenters to unjustly accuse me of lying about it a few months ago).

Guess it’s only an outrage when Republican presidents fire a few US attorneys. A wholesale slaughter isn’t very interesting, when a Democrat does it. Particularly when it’s a Democrat whom the press had just propelled into office by ignoring, or helping spin away, all of the many corruption issues and incipient scandals associated with him (certainly Clinton’s problems with ethics and aversion to truth weren’t unknown to Arkansas reporters of the era). And as Bork also notes, it set the stage for all the scandalous activity to come.

[Update]

Andy McCarthy has more on Democrat double standards in such matters, particularly from Senator Feinstein..