Liberals are outraged by Eric Cantor’s assurances to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the GOP will “serve as a check” to the Obama administration. Adam Sewer wrote regarding Cantor’s and many other Republicans’ response to Nancy Pelosi’s unauthorized 2006 visit to Syria, “Based on Cantor’s own standard, he’s just committed a felony.” He quoted Cantor himself:
Presenting Assad with “a new Democratic alternative” — code for making President Bush look feckless — Mrs. Pelosi usurped the executive branch’s time-honored foreign-policy authority. Her message to Assad was that congressional Democrats will forbid the president from increasing pressure on Damascus to stop its murderous way. Several leading legal authorities have made the case that her recent diplomatic overtures ran afoul of the Logan Act, which makes it a felony for any American “without authority of the United States” to communicate with a foreign government to influence that government’s behavior on any disputes with the United States.
Glenn Greenwald griped, “Imagine if a leading Democratic Congressman told a leader of a foreign country he’d side with them against the GOP US President” and “Imagine John Kerry, 2006, to French President Jacques Chirac: ‘I’ll safeguard French interests against President Bush’.” We don’t have to imagine situations where top-level Democrats have worked to undermine U.S. policy abroad. There are plenty of examples. David Freddoso referenced one when he tweeted in reply, “No need to imagine. It happened in 02.” Greenwald complained,
Had Cantor done this with any foreign nation other than Israel, this would easily be the leading political controversy of the week.
Liberals have whined for years about the “Israel exception” where Republicans are accused of violating the Logan Act with regard to Israel. But if Democrats don’t violate the Logan Act in Israel, they certainly feel empowered to do so in the rest of the world.
1970: John Kerry, as an inactive Navy reserve officer, met during wartime with enemy officials while his government was trying to conduct negotiations with them.
1983: Ted Kennedy secretly offered to help the Russians “counter the militaristic politics of Reagan” during the Cold War.
1984: Top Congressional Democrats including Jim Wright, Edward Boland, Lee Hamilton, and Stephen Solarz wrote the “Dear Commandante” letter to Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, which stated, “As members of the U.S. House of Representatives… We have been, and remain, opposed to U.S. support for military action directed against the people or government of Nicaraugua.”¹
1987: House Speaker Jim Wright (D-TX) took it upon himself to conduct negotiations with Ortega. Nor was he the only Democrat involved – several were caught during CIA surveillance of the Sandinistas.
1992: Judiciary Committee Republicans sought a special prosecutor to investigate recent newspaper reports that a consultant who may have said he had links to the Clinton campaign sought to stall a final accord on reduced trade barriers after six years of negotiations among 108 nations under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. (They were denied, reducing the story to he said, she said.)
2002: Democrats David Bonior, Jim McDermott, and Mike Thompson took what turned out to be a junket sponsored by Saddam Hussein to Baghdad to oppose the embargo and the upcoming war in Iraq.
2006: Senator Ben Nelson met with Syrian President Bashar Assad, “without the authority and contrary to the wishes of the Bush administration, including the State Department.”
2007: Howard Dean admitted, “I am trying to build relationships with other governments in preparation for a Democratic takeover. I want to make clear that there is an opposition in America and that we are ready to take power and that when we do, we are going to have much better relationships with them.”
Nancy Pelosi also met with Syrian President Bashar Assad in 2007, along with Congressmen Keith Ellison (D-MN), Nick Rahall (D-WV), Tom Lantos (D-CA), Henry Waxman (D-CA), and David Hobson (R-OH).
2008: Then-Senator Obama tried to talk the Iraqi government into delaying the draw-down agreement in 2008.
Are all these examples actual violations of the Logan Act? That’s for a court to decide, but the problem is that one never will. Government officials, especially Democrats, violate it with impunity because they’re confident they’ll never be prosecuted. It’s rare they even get bad press for doing so. If these were social visits, perhaps Democrats should reconsider who they’re hanging out with.
Isn’t the real lesson here that the Logan Act is meaningless except for its value as a political cudgel? If the Logan Act is not going to be enforced, it should be repealed. I don’t know whether Cantor violated the Logan Act by making those comments to Netanyahu but if the DOJ thinks he did, by all means, prosecute him for it. Democrats are going to be hit a lot harder by Logan Act enforcement than Republicans will. And if the DOJ continues to enforce the law unequally (sanctuary cities get a pass, yet Arizona is prosecuted; some voter intimidation is more equal than others) then the 2010 teanami is going to seem like a pleasant day at the beach for Democrats in comparison to the 2012 wipeout.
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¹Edwin Meese, With Reagan: The Inside Story (Regnery Publishing) 238.





It looks like Cantor may be violating the Foreign Agents Registration Act as well.
libhomo recently posted..Incredible Video on the Selfishness And Insensitivity of Some Religious People
If so, they need to stop yapping about it and prosecute him… and President Obama, for explicitly trying to interfere with the the drawdown agreement in Iraq back during the campaign in 2008. And every other self-important politician who exceeds the boundaries of his elected office where foreign countries are concerned. Frankly, I don’t see why members of Congress – yes, including Presidential candidates – should be talking to foreign leaders at all. Ever. We have enough problems at home to keep them busy; they should leave foreign policy to the President and his State Department.