As required by Article VI of the Constitution, Representative Chris Van Hollen swore this oath of office for the 110th Congress:
I, Chris Van Hollen, do solemnly swear... that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me God.
Mr. Van Hollen is by no means the only Democratic leader whose memory of that oath seems to need refreshing. But he's my representative -- one I've voted for, one I've worked for, and one whose positions I usually support -- so I'm addressing him.
As first reported on Takoma Park Impeach Bush & Cheney on Friday, Representative and Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) chairman Van Hollen made some remarks about impeachment during a telephone conference call with DCCC supporters and bloggers:
A caller asked about "Congress’s constitutional responsibility to impeach," adding "How much further abuse will be required for Democratic leadership to take action?"
Representative Van Hollen replied that Democrats have "stepped up from Day 1" and that they’re now in a "big fight" over the process of how U.S. Attorneys are hired and fired, and are now using subpoena power to try to compel testimony about that matter.
However, he did not want to "consume the entire resources and efforts" of Congress on impeachment. He claimed that impeachment would "would indisputably be the whole [focus] of Congress," and that with the amount of time remaining before the next election, that would hinder Democrats’ ability to move forward on other things. He closed by reiterating the talking point that he did not want to "consume the entire resources of Congress on impeachment."
While these are discouraging words to those of us who celebrated the city of Takoma Park's impeachment resolution on Monday, there may be a silver lining -- this argument is so patently absurd that an accomplished, intelligent man like Mr. Van Hollen could surely not bear repeating it for very long. I'll look it up to make absolutely sure, but I don't believe that crops rotted in the fields, millions starved, or that Congress was unable to do other work during the Nixon and Clinton impeachment processes.
Unfortunately, once you allow for hyperbole, Van Hollen's statement is doubly discouraging. For it can surely only mean that supporting and defending the Constitution simply isn't worth it to Rep. Van Hollen, when he thinks of all the other things he wants to accomplish -- it's too costly, too much effort, too many other priorities suffer.
Too bad.
You took an oath, Mr. Van Hollen. That oath wasn't to pass an energy bill, it wasn't to raise the minimum wage, it wasn't to enact the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission, it wasn't even to get us out of Iraq.
I'm sorry it's inconvenient; I'm sorry it may mean more work; I'm sorry you may pass one less highway bill. But the oath you took was to support and defend the Constitution of the United States. That is your job.
Do your job.
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CROSSPOSTED from newsrack