
John Ashcroft
New Internationalist magazine, July 2002

In the Manichean world of 21st-century Washington, the ~ righteous
and the pure-of-soul are in the ascendant. The Christian Right
has never been so close to power as it is under the bible-brandishing
regime of George W Bush. And within this earnest collection of
the god-fearing, John Ashcroft sits closest to the throne.
The 58-year-old Yale graduate and former college football
star is the US Attorney General, a key player in the Bush Cabinet.
The strait-laced Ashcroft is the most powerful lawmaker in the
world's most powerful country - and the one who is driving the
country's domestic 'war on terrorism'. A scary proposition, given
his track record.
Ashcroft is a teetotal Christian fundamentalist, the son and
grandson of Pentecostal ministers. His father was a travelling
evangelist in the 19205 and John Jr joined the Assemblies of God
movement - of Jimmy Swaggart and Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker fame
- when he was a young man. His is an unambiguous, simple faith.
After being sworn in as Attorney General he instituted morning-prayer
sessions in his Washington office. Later, when he hung curtains
around two Art Deco statues in the Justice Building, rumours flew
that he was uncomfortable with the partially exposed breast of
one statue.
Ashcroft sees public service as his Christian duty - not a
bad thing in itself. But he is also a politician who feels that
God is personally in his corner and on the side of the American
people. He takes this intimate connection to the Lord seriously,
even interpreting the ups and downs of his political career in
Christian imagery. His electoral defeats he refers to as 'crucifixions'
and his victories as 'resurrections'.
He's had a few of both. He was a two-term Governor of Missouri
before being elected to the US Senate in 1994. When he ran for
re-election in 2000 his Democratic opponent Mel Carnahan was killed
in a plane crash three weeks before the election, but ended up
winning anyway. Then came the resurrection: George W's offer of
the Attorney General job.
Ashcroft was not welcomed with open arms. Liberals were aghast
at his Senate record, which was dismally regressive: anti-tax,
anti-abortion, anti-AIDs funding, anti-gay rights, anti-public
arts funding. In fact, 'anti' just about everything except those
old-time, love-your-neighbour Christian issues: the death penalty
and the freedom to bear arms.
There were also concerns about his ability to separate his
personal beliefs from his job as the nation's top law-maker. In
a 1998 interview he told the pro-confederate, pro-slavery magazine
Southern Partisan that it helped 'set the record straight' by
defending 'Southern patriots like [Robert E] Lee, [Stonewall]
Jackson and [Jefferson] Davis.'
During his stint as Governor of Missouri he pleased anti-choice
groups by dismissing both rape and incest as grounds for abortion.
Later he declared: 'If I had the opportunity to pass a single
law, I would fully recognize the constitutional right to life
of every unborn child.' No wonder The Christian Coalition (a conservative
lobby group) gave him a 100-per-cent rating in the run-up to the
2000 Senate race.
During his stint as Attorney General John Jr hasn't done much
to calm his critics. Last February in Nashville, Tennessee, he
told an assembly of religious broadcasters that American 'freedoms'
are made in Heaven,' not the grant of any government or document,
but our endowment from God'. This must be worrying for Americans
who believe the US Constitution was written by human beings and
that the rule of law has something to do with ordinary mortals
sorting out for themselves systems of self-government.
But it is Ashcroft's behaviour since last September that has
civil libertarians in the US most upset. Once the Bush administration
declared its 'war on terrorism' Ashcroft quickly pushed through
the US Patriot Act - a wide-ranging, complex piece of legislation
that threatens to overturn decades of advances in civil liberties.
The new law gives the Government sweeping powers to monitor its
citizens including expanded search-and-seizure, and wiretapping,
the power to detain non-citizens indefinitely and the suspension
of habeas corpus. FBI spooks can even seize library borrowing
records to check out what those evil would-be terrorists might
be reading.
When he was questioned about wanting to bring suspected terrorists
before a secret military tribunal Ashcroft accused his opponents
of being unpatriotic. He dismissed those concerned about civil
liberties as weak-kneed bleeding hearts who 'aid terrorists' and
'give ammunition to America's enemies'. Such bullying in the emotional
aftermath of 1l September brings to mind the closed-minded bluster
of 19505 McCarthyism.
And that's just the beginning. If Ashcroft has his way (Gallup
polls indicate he has 75-per-cent public approval) Americans could
be in for a lot worse. What he and his cronies in the Justice
Department really want is to stack the federal judiciary with
rightwing judges. That's when they can begin their real work:
rolling back 50 years of progress on social-justice issues in
the US.
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