- By Bruce Olson
-
PORTLAND, Ore. (Reuters) - The Oregon Democratic Party endorsed
on Sunday a drive to impeach five U.S. Supreme Court justices
for the decision that gave George W. Bush the presidency last
year.
The party's central committee voted overwhelmingly to begin a
campaign it hopes will take the issue to the U.S. House of Representatives,
which has the authority to impeach justices.
The resolution passed Sunday by the 66 Oregon party activists
called for the ``immediate investigation of the behavior'' of
the five justices who voted to stop hand recounts of Florida
ballots. The decision gave Bush the majority of electoral votes
and the presidency. Then-Vice President Al Gore won the popular
vote.
The justices who voted to stop the hand recounts were Chief
Justice William Rehnquist and Associate Justices Antonin Scalia,
Sandra Day O'Connor, Clarence Thomas and Anthony Kennedy.
``This is the first organized effort to advocate impeachment
of five justices,'' said former Rep. Charles Porter, 82, who
first raised the issue with Lane County Democrats and then convinced
the state party to adopt the resolution.
Porter accused the five of ``egregiously bad behavior, high crimes
and misdemeanors.''
Neel Pender, executive director of Oregon's Democratic Party,
said party officials would ask its congressional delegation to
begin investigating the matter. The delegation has four Democratic
House members and one Democratic senator.
Neither the delegation or national Democratic Party officials
had any immediate comment. There has been no response yet from
the high court on the Oregon move, but the justices have defended
the December ruling. Recently, Thomas told a conference in St.
Louis that any suggestion of partisanship in the decision was
wrong.
``I think one of the ways our process is cheapened and trivialized
is when it's suggested we have a way to make decisions that have
more to do with politics,'' Thomas said.
Oregon has long been known as a maverick state in U.S. politics.
It was the home of some of the earliest official opposition to
the Vietnam War and Green Party candidate Ralph Nader won 5 percent
of the vote in the 2000 election.
Only one justice has been impeached. In 1805, Samuel Chase,
survived a Senate trial after he was impeached on charges of
discriminating against supporters of Thomas Jefferson. http://www.wnd.com/frame/direct.asp?SITE=dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20010722/pl/politics_oregon_dc_1.html |