WP reports that the US Special Counsel might be the last honest Republican in the Administration. He is demanding that Bush Punish GSA Chief Lurita Doan for violating the Hatch Act.
Scott J. Bloch, a long time Republican appointee has had it with the corruption in his own administration.
"I recommend that Administrator Doan be disciplined to the fullest extent for her serious violation of the Hatch Act and insensitivity to cooperating fully and honestly in the course of our investigation," Bloch wrote.
The Republican Party is so thoroughly corrupt that not one area they have touched in this "revolution’ has been honest, thorough or open. Running the country into the ground by appointing campaigners instead of competent people is a violation of the law and they know it.
But then IOKIYAR
The U.S. special counsel has called on President Bush to discipline General Services Administration chief Lurita Alexis Doan "to the fullest extent" for violating the federal Hatch Act when she allegedly asked political appointees how they could "help our candidates" during a January meeting.
In a June 8 letter to Bush, Special Counsel Scott J. Bloch accused Doan of "engaging in the most pernicious of political activity" during a Jan. 26 lunch briefing involving 36 GSA political appointees and featuring a PowerPoint presentation about the November elections by the White House's deputy director of political affairs.
At the presentation's conclusion, Doan asked what could be done to "help our candidates," according to a special counsel report. Several GSA appointees who watched the presentation told special counsel investigators that some appointees responded with ideas of how the agency could use its facilities to benefit the Republican Party.
So what happens when a Bush Administration official gets caught with their pants down?
"We're reviewing it," said Scott Stanzel, a White House spokesman. "It's an internal deliberation, and we don't talk about internal deliberations at the White House."
Basically- until 1/9/09, nothing.
Link here:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/...