The Center for American Progress casts a critical eye on Wal-Mart’s new PR offensive:

Yesterday, Wal-Mart CEO Lee Scott launched a public relations campaign aimed to restore the company’s tarnished image. He’s begun lashing out at the company’s critics, claiming Wal-Mart is the victim of a misinformation campaign. Displaying its trademark light touch, Wal-Mart placed 100 full-page advertisements in major newspapers laying out its side of the story. The advertisement declares, “everyone is entitled to their own opinions about our company, but they are not entitled to make up their own facts.” But Wal-Mart presents an incomplete and dishonest account of how it treats its employees…Wal-Mart brags about the generous benefits package it extends to employees. But the company fails to mention that “only 40% of the company’s one million U.S. employees are currently enrolled in its healthcare plan, leaving close to 600,000 of its employees acquiring health insurance elsewhere — or not at all.”…In the advertisement, Wal-Mart continues on to praise itself for paying “almost twice the federal minimum wage” to its hourly store associates and listing the many benefits that come with employment. However, wages for many Wal-Mart employees are so low that they are forced to rely on government assistance – especially for health care. In Washington State, subsidized insurance for the workers who aren’t covered by their employers costs taxpayers “several million dollars annually.”…In Georgia, a new AFL-CIO study found 10,000 children of Wal-Mart employees were enrolled in Georgia’s public health insurance program. As comparison, the next highest employer was Publix, with 734 children enrolled…

Wal-Mart claims that “seventy-four percent of [its] hourly associates in the United States work full-time.” What the company chooses not to address is the nearly 40 wage-and-hour lawsuits currently filed against them…The self-aggrandizing advertisement also highlights the claim that Wal-Mart promotes “from within.” It just doesn’t get into the messy details of who gets the “tap on the shoulder.” According to a report citing findings from a 2003 article in The Financial Times, “two-thirds of the company’s hourly workers are female [but] women hold only one-third of managerial positions and constitute less than 15 percent of store managers.”…Of the many “perks” that should come with being employed at Wal-Mart, workers’ right to organize – internationally “recognized as a core labor standard and a basic human right” – is not mentioned. This glaring absence is not a mistake: “Wal-Mart has consistently stated that it will not bargain with any union, and has repeatedly taken drastic steps to prevent workers from organizing in stores across North America.” Managers at Wal-Marts even have a “hotline to call so that company specialists can respond rapidly and head off any attempt by employees to organize.” The various strategies that Wal-Mart has employed to get around unions have resulted in the company being hit with over 100 charges, complaints, and rebukes by United Food and Commercial Workers, the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions and the United States government. Despite facing grand jury investigations, National Labor Review Board judges, and class action suits, behind closed doors, Wal-Mart applauds its “union avoidance strategy.”

This week’s YDN also featured several strong letters from GESO members and allies. Annemarie Strassel called on Yale to make good on its stated commitment to diversity:

Yale’s workforce is starkly stratified along lines of race and gender, so that women and people of color are concentrated in lower levels — whether they are maintenance workers, office workers or teachers and researchers…GESO and locals 34 and 35 have repeatedly proposed concrete solutions to this problem, yet the administration has repeatedly refused to talk with us about our proposals. Their recalcitrance reached new heights when not one administrator responded to a grievance about diversity submitted by over 300 graduate students last April. When, six months later, graduate students in the African American Studies department asked Dean Butler why the administration had responded to the grievance with only deafening silence, he claimed, incredibly, that it had been lost. When the administration finally mustered a response last month, it was only to refuse to commit to any concrete steps to improve equality in the university’s workforce — or even to hold an open forum to discuss these issues. Given these events, one could be forgiven for suspecting that the University’s commitment to diversity is more rhetorical than it is real. Provost Andrew Hamilton averred to the News that this is “a challenging problem with no quick and easy solution.” We have offered solutions; administrators have failed to act.

Theresa Runstedtler described the implications of academic casualization:

Across the United States’ university system, high quality education with expert instructors and low student-teacher ratios is being overrun by a trend towards content delivery from a casualized, marginalized workforce of temporary lecturers with few resources, negligible job security, and little say in important decisions about curriculum. Let’s look at the numbers. The percentage of part-time faculty has ballooned from 22 percent in 1970 to 41 percent in 1995. Despite these statistics, universities continue to award more new Ph.D.s per year than they hire each year. And, it is hardly surprising that women and people of color are the ones bearing the real brunt of this shift in administrative prerogative, making up 58 percent of the blossoming ranks of temporary faculty while only 30 percent of the increasingly rare full-time, tenure-track positions…It is not pessimism nor a lack of work ethic that drives us but rather our optimism about what the academy can be with a dedicated, respected group of teachers and researchers.

Jay Driskell responded to the NLRB’s Brown decision:

According to the dissent, American universities increasingly rely on graduate students to perform important teaching and other work. According to “Blackboard Blues,” a GESO study from 2003, graduate students and adjunct instructors provide 70 percent of teaching contact hours. As teachers, we are vitally necessary to the functioning of Yale University. The work we perform forms the bedrock of an undergraduate education. It is teaching assistants who grade most of the blue books, read drafts of research papers, teach languages and run the review sessions. Additionally, TAs free up faculty members to write the books and articles that make Yale’s reputation. The economic realities that have brought thousands of graduate teachers into the labor movement over the last two decades will not disappear by legally defining the problem out of existence. It would serve Yale University well to come to terms with these realities. As long as these persist, GESO will never stop fighting for recognition.

Evan Cobb called for pay equity:

In a few weeks new surveys will go out, and just as I have for the past three terms, I will declare that, no, my job description isn’t accurate at all. And just like in past terms, I’ll hope that somewhere, in the spirit of making a contribution to the academic mission of the university, an administrator will see this problem and find a way to solve it. But perhaps more disturbing than the problem itself are the solutions Yale administrators have already proposed. In response to my survey answers last semester, Yale College Associate Dean Judith Hackman wrote to me to explain that language teaching is supposed to be a half-time commitment and that I should meet with my Director of Graduate Studies “to adjust [my] teaching responsibilities.” When administrators would much rather ask teachers to plan less, prepare less, grade less attentively and spend less time with students, instead of dealing with a broken pay scale, it becomes clear that the system is broken. The very deans who are supposed to be guarding and securing excellence in education are actively encouraging its detriment. Last spring, 89 graduate students in the languages and literatures filed a series of grievances with the Graduate School on issues related to pay equity. Dean Butler’s response was simply to reiterate the existing pay scale as though it were a self-defending truth. Next semester, though I’ll no longer be a “Teaching Fellow Program Participant,” I will still be at Yale, teaching for a living, trying to support my research. I will earn less than at any previous point in my time here for doing the exact same work.

And Bobby Proto offered a historical perspective:

For years, Yale’s increasing use of casual workers hurt black and Latino workers more than anyone else. Our union fought to stop this abuse, and we demand that Yale provides everyone with equal opportunity regardless of the color of their skin. So when Yale’s graduate teachers see the same thing happening in the classroom — Yale hiring more and more women and people of color into “casual” teaching positions while reserving the good tenured jobs for white men — then it’s natural that they would turn to Local 35 to learn how to fix the problem. Stick together. Stand strong. That’s how you get Yale’s attention. Local 35 never had an NLRB election. We fought and forced Yale to agree to a fair process, so that the workers that wanted the union got the union. Then, we didn’t stop supporting the unionization of Yale’s clerical workers just because they lost two union elections during the 1970s. In 1983, they won a squeaker election and then went on strike. We respected their picket line, and together we won excellent contracts, reducing the gender pay gap by raising wages for what was considered “women’s work.” We have learned never to turn our backs on any group of workers, and we’ll never forget that lesson. That’s why we’ll continue supporting our brothers and sisters in GESO, who walked our picket lines and stood with us in our struggles.

Keith Urbahn makes an unpersuasive comparison between graduate student workers and allies fighting for the right to organize and flat-earthers:

Our lovable but deluded Flat-Earthers are the members of the Graduate Employees and Students Organization (GESO), the self-proclaimed representatives of graduate students. GESO’s unremarkable history is marred by failure and distinct feelings of apathy and even opposition from many graduate students — both realities the organization continues to deny. Never mind the fact that the Yale administration has always refused to consider it a legitimate interest group, or that over the summer the National Labor Relations Board unequivocally struck down any right for students to organize as employees at private universities, or that GESO just might be the only group in history to lose its own rigged election, as it did in April 2003.

As I argued at the time, the vote by the Bush-appointed majority to overturn a unanimous decision and strip graduate student workers of their rights as employees is one of a constellation of anti-labor decisions pushed through by right-wing activist NLRB judges over the past three years. Other recent targets have included non-union workers, casual workers, and disabled workers. Hell, even the prophets of classlessness at The New Republic have taken notice. It wasn’t so long ago in this country when publice employees, or agricultural workers, or workers as a whole were denied a legal right to unionize. It’s hard to imagine that the same Yale administrators who blithely ignored the NLRB’s historic NYU decision now expect graduate student workers to roll over because lobbying by, inter alia, those administrators has yielded a new one.

As for the election Keith calls “rigged,” the date and time were well-publicized, the qualifications were clear and well-scrutinized, and the whole process was overseen by the League of Women Voters. Every graduate student who showed up, whether or not they were on the list of those who would be part of the bargaining unit, got to cast a provisional vote, and GESO chose not to contest any of them. Certainly, GESO should have done a better job of turning out their supporters, more of whom went out on strike with the union than made it out to vote for it. Unfortunately, Yale’s strategy of depressing pro-union turnout through publically describing it as “like getting your friends together to have an election,” while hiking anti-union turnout through intense pressure from advisors on advisees, particularly in the sciences, was more effective than many had predicted. Read more about Yale’s anti-union campaign here. Even under those circumstances, the result was a near tie. Nearly two years later, last month three out of five teaching assistants in the humanities and social sciences declared they had signed union cards and demanded Yale recognize their union. But Keith is unfazed:

And indeed, a 12-week process of soliciting names from a predetermined list of eligible “voters” had finally created the results GESO organizers long desired. Sixty percent of 521 eligible TAs in the humanities, social science and language departments voted in favor of unionization. In a crude attempt to lend at least a veneer of legality to the sham of an election, GESO solicited the help of Secretary of State Susan Bysiewicz to certify the “vote.” What Bysiewicz and giddy GESO supporters failed to mention at the Dec. 14 meeting was that the card count was hardly representative of the whole graduate student body. In an effort to exclude departments predominately opposed to unionization — most notably those in the natural sciences — GESO changed the eligibility requirements, denying the right to vote to hundreds who differed with the group’s agenda.

What the vote was representative of is a three-fifths consensus of those whose primary employment is teaching in the humanities and social sciences supporting a union of teaching assistants in the humanities and social sciences. For years now, Yale has been claiming that GESO was illegitimate because its proposed bargaining unit included both students in the sciences and the humanities. Since the new NLRB decision, the union’s opponents have flipped their argument. Negotiations over the shape of a bargaining unit are a standard part of a unionization process. The problem is, Yale is still maintaining its dozen-year policy of refusing to negotiate – or meet – with GESO about anything. That includes the nature of a fair process for unionization, another issue on which Keith takes the administration’s side:

Furthermore, the method of a “card count,” a process in which GESO representatives solicited support for unionization by approaching eligible TAs, is hardly a fair way of gauging the graduate community’s interest in unionization. The card count allowed for the possibility of intimidation and coercion — both well-worn GESO tactics according to some graduate students.

Card count neutrality agreements provide workers a measure of protection against the employer intimidation made possible by the asymetrical power relationship in the workplace. As Kate Bronfenbrenner’s research demonstrated, majorities of workers during NLRB election processes strongly fear losing their jobs if they vote for the union, and a third who vote against the union themselves identify their vote as a response to employer pressure. That’s why politicians of both parties are pushing the Employee Free Choice Act in support of card check processes. That said, GESO’s demand for years was an agreement with Yale on a fair process whose results both sides would follow. But Levin, while with one breath telling GESO only an NLRB process was acceptable, that “democracy means elections,” with the other maintained that he would appeal the results of any election, leaving the ballots uncounted and impounded, as his allies in the Penn, Brown, and Columbia administrations have done in response to NLRB elections there. Democracy means following the results of elections. And as I’ve said before, I don’t think a graduate school in which students refrain from trying to win over students who might disagree with them on the issues they face is one living up to the values of liberal education. If you think it’s hard being an anti-union graduate student in a department where most of your peers are in the union, trying being a union member whose research funding depends on a supervisor who hates the union. Now imagine that situation if, say, losing your research funding means being deported out of the country. The plight of international students is, incidentally, one of many issues on which GESO’s lobbying has successfully brought change from the administration. But Keith isn’t too keen on GESO’s issue agenda either:

GESO has become increasingly involved with locals 34 and 35 on issues that are at best tangentially related to graduate student organization…Duped by that word “union” and the “Norma Rae” fantasies of some Yale graduate students — or more likely, attracted to the opportunity of political allies in the fight against the Yale administration — members of the real unions locals 34 and 35 attended the December meeting, dutifully holding up signs and chanting in support of the new “union” of graduate students.

This is the classic “narrow agenda/broader agenda line of argument Yale’s administration has been firing at its unions for at least as long as Keith and I have been at Yale: Either the unions are parochial institutions only narrowly concerned with their members’ wages and benefits who could care less about the greater good, or they’re shadowy, expansive conspiracies with designs to meddle everywhere they’re not wanted. The truth is, unions best protect the rights of their own workers and of all Americans when they have broad agendas. That’s why the trade union approach of the CIO did more for American labor, and for America, than the craft union approach of the AFL ever could. GESO is right to recognize that fighting for graduate student workers means fighting for their rights as immigrant workers against capricious deportation. And GESO is right to recognize that graduate student workers’ voices are most powerful, and their interests are best represented, when they stand together with other Yale employees on issues of common concern, like diversifying Yale’s workforce and supporting working mothers. And members of Locals 34 and 35, far from being the ignorant dupes Keith labels them, are right to recognize that their rights as workers are best protected and advanced by safeguarding the right to organize for all Yale employees and joining them in struggle over common challenges. That’s why, for so many in Yale’s service, maintenance, and clerical workforce, it rings hollow when Dan Koffler argues that:

The suggestion that Ph.Ds in waiting have a common class interest with lifelong wage-laborers, least of all Yale Ph.Ds in waiting, is an unfunny, borderline obscene joke. It is, moreover, a notion that can only hurt the cause of real workers.

As I argued here before, the salient question is not and should not be whether a teaching assistant or a secretary is more exploited or more sympathetic. The question is, do these workers face common challenges? And out of these common challenges, how do they find common cause and better effect progressive change in their own lives and in Yale as an institution? The argument that different kinds of workers should keep to themselves is not new. It was a hallmark of Yale’s anti-union campaign against clerical and technical workers before Local 34 was finally recognized in 1984. Unions are all well and good for the largely male, largely minority, blue-collar workforce of Local 35, Yale clerical and technical workers were told, but are they really the kind of institutions that Yale’s “pink-collar” clerical and technical workers should be associated with. Local 34 and Local 35 stood together, in the face of threats of reprisals against Local 35 by Yale’s administration, and after Local 34 won its ten-week strike and its first contract, Local 35’s new contract was settled quickly once Local 34 made clear its intention to stand in support of Local 35. That’s what winning looks like. And so it’s strangely appropriate how Keith chooses to end his article:

…we know whom they truly stand for: themselves.

Yes, graduate students signing union cards are standing for themselves, and for each other. And because many undergraduates see themselves as future graduate students, its understandable that those who believe in a comfortable dichotomy between service and self-interest have more trouble getting on board with GESO. But now more than ever, in the face of the growing casualization of the academy (a trend which makes Dan’s description of graduate students as “YalePh.D.s in waiting” more misleading), graduate students are right to organize for better working conditions and a better university, and others in the Yale community are right to stand with them.

Human Rights Watch warns against appointments of war crimminals to the Congolese Army:

The Democratic Republic of Congo’s transitional government should investigate and prosecute militia leaders responsible for massacres and other grave war crimes in the northeastern Ituri district, not reward them with high-ranking posts in the country’s newly integrated army, Human Rights Watch said today. On January 10, the Congolese Chief of Staff appointed five former warlords from the Ituri district in northeastern Congo to serve as generals in the country’s army. Four of the five new generals—Jérôme Kakwavu, Floribert Kisembo, Bosco Taganda and Germain Katanga—are alleged to have committed serious human rights abuses including war crimes and crimes against humanity. Hundreds of witnesses have told Human Rights Watch that these four commanders ordered, tolerated or personally committed ethnic massacres, murder, torture, rape, mutilation and the recruitment of child soldiers. According to United Nations estimates, the conflict in Ituri has cost the lives of more than 60,000 civilians. “Appointments like these raise serious questions about the Congolese government’s commitment to justice and human rights,” said Alison Des Forges, senior advisor to the Africa Division of Human Rights Watch. “The government needs to take these warlords to court, not give them responsible positions in the army.”

Yesterday’s highlight in the Bush-administration-admitting-something-about-Iraq-abundantly-apparent-to-everyone-else category was this:

The U.S. force that scoured Iraq for weapons of mass destruction — cited by President Bush as justification for war — has abandoned its long and fruitless hunt, U.S. officials said on Wednesday. The 1,700-strong Iraq Survey Group, responsible for the hunt, last month wrapped up physical searches for weapons of mass destruction, and it will now gather information to help U.S. forces in Iraq win a bloody guerrilla war, officials said. “I felt like we would find weapons of mass destruction … like many — many here in the United States, many around the world,” Bush told ABC’s Barbara Walters, according to excerpts from an interview airing on Friday. Bush said “we need to find out what went wrong in the intelligence gathering,” and that the invasion was “absolutely” worth it even if there were no weapons of mass destruction.

Today, it’s this:

President Bush pledged to be more diplomatic, saying he regretted sending the wrong impression of the United States when he used phrases like “Bring ’em on” and “dead or alive” in his first term. In an interview with ABC’s Barbara Walters to be broadcast Friday, Bush said some of his past remarks were too blunt. “‘Bring it on’ was a little blunt,” the president said in a transcript of the interview released Thursday. “I remember when I talked about Osama bin Laden, I said we’re going to get him dead or alive. I guess it’s not the most diplomatic of language,” Bush said…In another mea culpa, the president said he felt his administration had done a poor job bolstering its image in the Muslim world. “Our public diplomacy efforts aren’t … very robust and aren’t very good compared to the public diplomacy efforts of those who would like to spread hatred and … vilify the United States,” Bush said.

The founders:

…no religious test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States. (Article VI)

The President:

I don’t see how you can be president at least from my perspective, how you can be president, without a relationship with the Lord.

As if George Bush hasn’t put DC through enough already:

D.C. officials said yesterday that the Bush administration is refusing to reimburse the District for most of the costs associated with next week’s inauguration, breaking with precedent and forcing the city to divert $11.9 million from homeland security projects. Federal officials have told the District that it should cover the expenses by using some of the $240 million in federal homeland security grants it has received in the past three years — money awarded to the city because it is among the places at highest risk of a terrorist attack. But that grant money is earmarked for other security needs, Mayor Anthony A. Williams (D) said in a Dec. 27 letter to Office of Management and Budget Director Joshua B. Bolten and Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge. Williams’s office released the letter yesterday. Williams estimated that the city’s costs for the inauguration will total $17.3 million, most of it related to security. City officials said they can use an unspent $5.4 million from an annual federal fund that reimburses the District for costs incurred because of its status as the capital. But that leaves $11.9 million not covered, they said.

George Bush plans further cuts in government support to those who need it most in order to pay for his tax cut for the super-rich:

The Bush administration is preparing a budget request that would freeze most spending on agriculture, veterans and science, slash or eliminate dozens of federal programs, and force more costs, from Medicaid to housing, onto state and local governments, according to congressional aides and lawmakers. The White House also plans to reintroduce measures to stem the growth of federal health care and other entitlement programs that rise automatically each year based on set formulas, they said. The tough budget for the fiscal year that begins in October is intended to signal President Bush’s commitment to reining in the record federal deficit, and to satisfying conservative critics who note spending has soared since Bush took office. “From a thematic standpoint, the goal is to reduce the deficit in half over four years, and you can’t reduce the deficit if you don’t reduce the growth of entitlements,” said Senate Budget Committee Chairman Judd Gregg (R-N.H.). “If the president sends up an aggressive budget, I’ll be certainly receptive to it, and I think the Congress will be, too.” Budget and appropriations committee aides say Bush’s budget — to be presented Feb. 7 — will be aggressive. Bush will impose “very, very strong discipline” in his 2006 budget, White House Chief of Staff Andrew H. Card Jr. told the U.S. Chamber of Commerce yesterday. “That discipline will be there big-time.”

Looks to me like from a thematic standpoint, Geoge Bush is apeing Charles Dickens. The rhetoric on an issue like this provides a great deal of credence for George Lakoff’s thesis in Moral Politics that conservatism draws on the cognitive frames of strict father morality, whereas liberalism’s frames come from nurturant parent morality. Notice all the talk about discipline and toughness to describe taking away the money poor people would use to become homeowners or students so that rich people can live that much more lavish lifestyles. As Lakoff writes in assessing a William Raspberry column comparing the D.C. city government to “the poor but compassionate mother with a credit card…[who]has to learn to say no”:

In the metaphor, the government is an overindulgent, impractical mother and the citizens are her children. She has no self-discipline; she is indulging her children irresponsibly, using money she doesn’t have…The moral is that Mom will have to learn self-discipline (“to say no”) and self-denial (“to quality cuts of meat she can’t afford”). Only then will she be a good mother…

One could have taken the same budget shortfall and framed it in a different way…One could also have mentioned that it is the responsibility of Congress to see that the city is maintained properly and that it lives by a humane standard, indeed that it should set a standard for the country. One could then apply the metaphor of the government as parent to Congress, seeing Congress as a deadbeat dad, refusing to pay for the support of his children, the citizens of Washington, D.C. One could then have drawn the moral that deadbeat dad Congress must meet his responsibilities and pay, no matter how tough it is for him. This is just common sense – a different kind of common sense.

A victory today for the rights of juries – and of defendants:

The Supreme Court struck down much of the system for sentencing criminals in federal cases today, reaffirming the principle that juries, not judges, must weigh factors that can add time to a defendant’s prison term. In a 5-to-4 ruling, the justices said that the 17-year-old federal sentencing system is invalid insofar as trial judges, rather than juries, have been ruling on the facts that go into determining time behind bars. The ruling was hardly unexpected, since the court ruled last June that Washington State’s sentencing system was invalid because it conferred too much power on judges to weight the facts: the same basic issue presented in the case that was decided today…

“It has been settled throughout our history that the Constitution protects every criminal defendant ‘against conviction except upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of every fact necessary to constitute the crime with which he is charged,’ ” the controlling opinion by Justice John Paul Stevens said…The sentencing system that was partly invalidated today was created to minimize wide disparities in sentences imposed for seemingly similar crimes. The Supreme Court majority said today that the statute’s basic purpose was a noble one, but that judges must now regard some of its provisions as guidelines rather than rules.

The YDN reports on Monday’s action at the Provost’s Office:

More than 80 graduate students and union members convened in the lobby of Provost Andrew Hamilton’s office Monday, demanding an open forum with Yale administrators to protest alleged discrimination in University employment practices. Most of the assembled protestors from the Graduate Employees and Students Organization as well as Locals 34 and 35 gathered outside the Hillhouse Avenue office while their leaders attempted to personally deliver the letter to the provost, but the group subsequently entered the building when the attempt proved unsuccessful. The protestors complained that Yale’s number of minority tenures, Ph.D. recipients and graduate students are all below the national average, while University officials maintained they are committed to encouraging diversity. “We’ve been fighting for issues of equal access for a long time, addressing issues that have not been resolved,” GESO Co-Chair Melissa Mason GRD ’08 said. “There’s only one black woman with tenure among the graduate faculty, and it doesn’t seem like Yale has a plan for fixing that.”

This followed Yale’s first responding to the grievance with the claim that it had been lost, and then – once it was resubmitted – responding with a letter insisting that Yale had the diversity situation under control. Monday was a key step in demanding a real dialogue about what Yale is and could be doing to foster real change and real diversity on campus.

Will Bunch on Bush’s new Homeland Security Nominee:

The bad news is that while Chertoff may lack the whiff of sex scandal that would put the NY tabloids on the case, he’s arguably a worse choice than Kerik. In the days after 9/11, Chertoff — as head of the criminal division under John Ashcroft — was architect of some of the most regrettable policies of Bush I. It was Chertoff, as assistant atttorney general overseeing the initial 9/11 probe, who OK’ed and then defended the detention of hundreds of “material witnesses” of Arab descent — even though it would later be determined that none — that’s right, none — of the detainees had anything to do with the terrorist attacks of 2001. Chartoff’s actions during this period would later be roundly criticized in a report from the Justice Department’s own Inspector General. It found that immigrants were rounded up in an “indiscriminate and haphazard manner,” held for months while denied access to attorneys and sometimes mistreated behind bars. The report noted that Chertoff “urged immigration officials to ‘hold these people until we find out what’s going on,’ despite the fact that many had been swept up and detained on minor immigration charges.” Chertoff also push prosecutors and the FBI into greatly expanded use of domestic surveillance. In November 2002, according to this report, he “defended the need for government agencies to aggregate large amounts of personal information in computer databases for both law enforcement and national security purposes.” What’s more, Chertoff was responsible for the badly botched prosecution of al-Qaeda terrorist Zacarias Moussaoui, who has yet to be brought to any type of justice even though he was arrested three-and-a-half years ago. Under his leadership, the Justice Department pursued a theory that Moussaoui was “the 20th hijacker” — despite zero evidence to support that claim. However, that argument has been used as an excuse to deny the American public from information that might prove what really happened to Flight 93 on 9/11.

David Corn reports an intriguing conversation with Armstrong Williams:

Why should the IG contact me? Williams replied, noting he had been merely a subcontractor. Any thorough investigation, I remarked, would include questioning the subcontractor. He scratched his head. “Funny,” he said. “I thought this [contract] was a blessing at the time.” And then Williams violated a PR rule: he got off-point. “This happens all the time,” he told me. “There are others.” Really? I said. Other conservative commentators accept money from the Bush administration? I asked Williams for names. “I’m not going to defend myself that way,” he said. The issue right now, he explained, was his own mistake. Well, I said, what if I call you up in a few weeks, after this blows over, and then ask you? No, he said.

Does Williams really know something about other rightwing pundits? Or was he only trying to minimize his own screw-up with a momentary embrace of a trumped-up everybody-does-it defense? I could not tell. But if the IG at the Department of Education or any other official questions Williams, I suggest he or she ask what Williams meant by this comment. And if Williams is really sorry for this act of “bad judgment” and for besmirching the profession of rightwing punditry, shouldn’t he do what he can to guarantee that those who watch pundits on the cable news networks and read political columnists receive conservative views that are independent and untainted by payoffs from the Bush administration or other political outfits?

Any pro-Bush pundits ready to step forward and announce that they’re not on the take?