President Bush advisers ordered to testify

President Bush advisers ordered to testify

A CONGRESSIONAL committee has voted to order key White House aides to testify under oath about the controversial firing of eight federal prosecutors.

The move could set up a constitutional showdown with the White House, which has vowed to resist such moves. President George W Bush says he will only allow the aides to speak privately, and not under oath.Congress wants to question Karl Rove, President Bush’s top political adviser, as well as Bush’s former lawyer.Critics say last year’s sacking of the attorneys was politically motivated.Bush’s Attorney General, Alberto Gonzales, has faced calls to resign over the dismissals.The president has thus far stood by Gonzales, a long-time confidant from their days in Texas before they came to Washington together.Gonzales says the prosecutors were dismissed because their performances were below standard.Congressional investigations have found that Bush’s former counsel, Harriet Miers, proposed firing all 93 US attorneys nationwide in 2005.One of the sacked attorneys was replaced by a former aide to Rove.Bush said on Tuesday that Congress should accept his offer to let his aides testify privately, without oath or transcript.He vowed to resist any order, or subpoena, for them to testify in public, saying presidential aides would be compromised if they feared having to justify themselves publicly.”We will not go along with a partisan fishing expedition aimed at honourable public servants,” Bush said.On Wednesday White House counsel Dan Bartlett told National Public Radio that any subpoena would be refused by the administration.He added such a move would lead the White House to withdraw its offer of private testimony.The BBC’s Jonathan Beale in Washington says the House demand for testimony under oath sets up a constitutional battle between the president and Congress which could end up in the Supreme Court.The criticism of Gonzales began with the Democrats who now control Congress, but some Republicans have joined the chorus.The Senate voted overwhelmingly – and with bipartisan support – on Tuesday to strip Gonzales of the power to appoint US attorneys without its consent.BBCPresident George W Bush says he will only allow the aides to speak privately, and not under oath.Congress wants to question Karl Rove, President Bush’s top political adviser, as well as Bush’s former lawyer.Critics say last year’s sacking of the attorneys was politically motivated.Bush’s Attorney General, Alberto Gonzales, has faced calls to resign over the dismissals.The president has thus far stood by Gonzales, a long-time confidant from their days in Texas before they came to Washington together.Gonzales says the prosecutors were dismissed because their performances were below standard.Congressional investigations have found that Bush’s former counsel, Harriet Miers, proposed firing all 93 US attorneys nationwide in 2005.One of the sacked attorneys was replaced by a former aide to Rove.Bush said on Tuesday that Congress should accept his offer to let his aides testify privately, without oath or transcript.He vowed to resist any order, or subpoena, for them to testify in public, saying presidential aides would be compromised if they feared having to justify themselves publicly.”We will not go along with a partisan fishing expedition aimed at honourable public servants,” Bush said.On Wednesday White House counsel Dan Bartlett told National Public Radio that any subpoena would be refused by the administration.He added such a move would lead the White House to withdraw its offer of private testimony.The BBC’s Jonathan Beale in Washington says the House demand for testimony under oath sets up a constitutional battle between the president and Congress which could end up in the Supreme Court.The criticism of Gonzales began with the Democrats who now control Congress, but some Republicans have joined the chorus.The Senate voted overwhelmingly – and with bipartisan support – on Tuesday to strip Gonzales of the power to appoint US attorneys without its consent.BBC

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