WASHINGTON, Oct. 7 - President Bush's pick for the second-ranking position at the Justice Department abruptly withdrew his nomination Friday after facing weeks of questions over his ties to the lobbyist Jack Abramoff as well as his role in formulating policies for the treatment of suspected terrorists.
The nominee, Timothy Flanigan, a former deputy White House counsel who is now a senior lawyer at Tyco International, had been scheduled to face yet another round of questioning next week from senators who had grown skeptical about his nomination as deputy attorney general.
With the stalled nomination likely to drag on for weeks or longer, Mr. Flanigan told President Bush in his withdrawal letter on Friday that the president and Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales "deserve to have a full leadership team in place at the Department of Justice."
Of chief concern to Democrats and some Republicans was Mr. Flanigan's role at Tyco, where as its general counsel he oversaw Mr. Abramoff's work lobbying for the company, which is based in Bermuda, to retain its tax-exempt status. Critics of the nomination said they were also troubled by the fact that Mr. Flanigan had no experience as a criminal prosecutor and that he helped shape administration policy on the treatment of suspected terrorists in American custody, as deputy White House counsel under Mr. Gonzales.
Mr. Flanigan becomes the most prominent Bush appointee to pull his nomination since Bernard B. Kerik withdrew from consideration as homeland security secretary last December. In the end, Mr. Flanigan's nomination appears to have been scuttled by a convergence of disparate issues that have all proven increasingly difficult for the Bush administration: charges of cronyism in political appointees, the wide-ranging investigation into Mr. Abramoff's political lobbying work, and lingering concern about the administration's allowance of the questionable treatment of suspected terrorists.
The Jack Abramoff scandal just continues to ensnare Republican cronies! Abramoff is like...plutonium--you associate with Abramoff and you start taking on a neon-green glow! Here's the details of Flanigan's association with Abramoff, as according to the Times:
Mr. Bush nominated Mr. Flanigan for the deputy attorney general post 4½ months ago. The pick generated little controversy at first. But Mr. Flanigan faced persistent questions, first in an August hearing and then in four rounds of written, follow-up questions from Democrats - about both his oversight of Mr. Abramoff and his role in formulating detainees policies.
Democrats said they were still unsatisfied with some of his answers and demanded more time to review his record, particularly the question of why Tyco and Mr. Flanigan failed to detect that Mr. Abramoff had diverted for his use some $1.5 million paid by Tyco for what was to have been a grass-roots lobbying campaign. Senate Democrats were also continuing to probe other aspects of Mr. Flanigan's relationship with Mr. Abramoff, who gave the Tyco executive a $250 picture frame for Christmas one year.
Republicans on the judiciary committee sought to have a second hearing behind closed doors to deal with the issues concerning Tyco and Mr. Abramoff, but Senator Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, chairman of the committee, agreed Thursday to hold another public hearing next week.
So Flanigan didn't pick up that Abramoff diverted $1.5 million from a grass-roots lobbying campaign? If you're going to work as the number two man in the Justice Department, you've got to know how to follow the money as its being laundered. Or maybe Abramoff paid Flanigan off with a picture frame? It is another example of crass cronyism in the Bush White House. President Bush picks these people--not because they are the most qualified to run these top government positions, but rather because of their loyalties--loyalies to the president, to the Republican Party, to their golfing buddies. It is like they're all connected together--scratching each other's backs. Well now the scandals are starting to surface. Not only is Flanigan the only Bush administration official that has been tainted by Abramoff.
The withdrawal of Mr. Flanigan's nomination came on the same day that a former White House official tied to Mr. Abramoff made his first appearance in court to answer charges of obstruction of justice in connection with the case.
David H. Safavian, who served as the head of the White House's office of procurement until just before his arrest last month in the Abramoff investigation, did not enter a plea in federal court. But his lawyer, Barbara Van Gelder, offered a detailed preview of her client's defense after the hearing, telling reporters that prosecutors have "stretched the limits of the criminal code" in prosecuting him.
An indictment returned against Mr. Safavian on Wednesday charged that he lied to investigators about his contacts with Mr. Abramoff when he denied that the lobbyist had business before the General Services Administration, where Mr. Safavian was chief of staff from 2002 to 2004. E-mail messages traded between the two men at the time showed that Mr. Safavian was trying to help the lobbyists acquire two government-owned properties.
As for a golfing trip to Scotland that Mr. Safavian took with Mr. Abramoff in 2002, the defense lawyer said Mr. Safavian saw it as strictly a personal trip, not professional. "A man wanted to go golfing with his friends," she said. "It was all about golf."
"President Bush picks these people--not because they are the most qualified to run these top government positions, but rather because of their loyalties--loyalies to the president, to the Republican Party, to their golfing buddies." This comment is unfortunate. Any doubt about Flanigan's qualifications are ill-founded given his absolutely stellar legal resume (law clerk to Chief Justice Burger, partner in the D.C. office of White and Case, and in charge of the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel to name a few experiences).
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