Office
Arrests: The Shame of John Conyers
By Dave Lindorff
07/24/07 "ICH"
-- -- If Rosa Parks had lived two years longer, what
happened today in the halls of Congress might have killed
her. It certainly would have broken her heart.
Rep. John Conyers, venerable member of Congress, finally
chair of the House Judiciary Committee, a man who worked
with Parks in Alabama and then hired her on his staff after
he won election to Congress in Detroit, today had 48
impeachment activists, including Gold Star Families for
Peace founder Cindy Sheehan, Iraq Veteran Against the War
activist Lennox Yearwood and Intelligence Veterans for
Sanity founder Ray McGovern, arrested for conducting a
sit-in in his office in the Rayburn House Office Building.
The three, together with several hundred other impeachment
activists who packed the fourth floor hallway outside Rep.
Conyers’ office, had come to press Conyers to take action on
impeachment, and specifically to start action on H.Res. 333,
the bill submitted nearly three months ago by Rep. Dennis
Kucinich calling for the impeachment of Vice President Dick
Cheney.
After nearly an hour of talking with Conyers, a clearly
angry Sheehan emerged together with Yearwood and McGovern,
and announced to the waiting throng in the hall that Conyers
had told them “impeachment isn’t going to happen because we
don’t have the votes.” Sheehan said Conyers had insisted
that the best thing was for Democrats to focus on “winning
big in 2008.”
To a loud and angry chorus of boos and hisses, the three
went back inside Conyers’ office suite, where they were
joined by some 30 other supporters, and all were
subsequently arrested, at Conyers’ request, by Capitol
police, who cuffed them and walked them off for booking.
Several of those who sat in refused to walk and were carried
or dragged out of the Rayburn Office Building, as the
activists in the hall chanted “Shame on Conyers! Shame on
Conyers!” and “Arrest Bush, Not the People!”
It was a thoroughly disgraceful scene wholly unworthy of a
dean of the Congressional Black Caucus.
Before returning to sit in the Judiciary Chairman’s office
and await arrest, Sheehan publicly announced her intention
to run in 2008 as an independent candidate for Congress
against House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and she called on
Americans everywhere to run not just against Republicans in
2008, but against Democrats too.
Yearwood, who is a chaplain in the Air Force, said that
Conyers had been a mentor to him, but he declared that he
now felt betrayed and that Americans needed to take back
their government. As he was led down the hall to his
arraignment, the handcuffed Yearwood pointedly sang “We
Shall Overcome!”
This reporter subsequently called Conyers’ press office for
an explanation of Conyers’ true position on impeachment.
Only a few days earlier the congressman, visiting a San
Diego meeting on health care reform, had told members of
Progressive Democrats of America that it was time to “take
these two guys (Bush and Cheney) out” and had promised that
if just “a few more” members of the House signed on to the
Kucinich bill (it already has 14 co-sponsors), he would move
it forward for consideration in his Judiciary Committee.
Asked how that statement squared with what he had told the
group of activists in his office, the spokesman said
Conyers’ “must have been misunderstood” in San Diego. He
said that in view of Conyers’ statement to Sheehan and the
others today, the Kucinich bill was “not going to go
anywhere.”
As impeachment activist David Swanson of
AfterDowningStreet.org has said, there “seems to be two John
Conyers,” one who, in 2005 and early 2006, while Republicans
controlled the House, was systematically making the case for
impeaching the president and vice president (he had even
submitted a bill, with 39 co-sponsors, which called for
creation of a select committee to investigate possible
impeachable crimes by the administration), and one who,
submitting to the wishes of the new House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi, was keeping impeachment “off the table.”
Occasionally the former Conyers breaks out, saying things
such as that the president needs to be “taken out” or, as he
put it at an anti-war rally last spring, that “we can fire
him!” But then the other Conyers comes to the fore, and
stands in the way of impeachment action.
This time, however, it was worse than just doing nothing.
The arrest of impeachment activists and their forcible
eviction from his office was a betrayal of people who were
doing the very kind of thing that had allowed Conyers to
make his way into Congress in the first place: sitting in to
insist on action on their demands for justice. It was, after
all, sit-ins that helped lead to the Voting Rights Act which
allowed African American candidates like Conyers to finally
win seats in the US Congress.
It is becoming increasingly clear that the Democratic
Party-Congressional Black Caucus and Progressive Caucus
included–has become nothing but a dried out husk, living on
old glories and devoid of any principle other than returning
its elected officials to their offices and their perks, year
after year. As one angry activist in the hallway remarked,
“Where is today’s (Rep. Allard) Lowenstein or Father Drinan.
There is none!”
It’s ironic that Rep. Conyers, speaking in 2005 on
“Democracy Now!” following Rosa Parks’ death at the age of
92, said her passing “is probably the end of an era.”
Certainly, with his request to have Capitol Police officers
enter his office (the very office where Parks once had
worked as a staff member!) to cuff and arrest peaceful
protesters who were trying to defend the Constitution, he
has made that point far more clearly than he could have
expressed it in mere words.
But as in the case of Rosa Parks and the Civil Rights
movement, arrests and fines will not stop the national
grassroots drive to impeach this president and vice
president. With polls showing that a majority of the country
now favors impeachment, and with Conyers, Pelosi, and the
Democratic Congress sinking deeper and deeper into disfavor
even as the president continues to add to his list of
Constitutional crimes, something’s gotta give. After all,
the Founders, in writing impeachment into the Constitution,
did not say the test was whether Congress had the votes to
impeach. They wrote that if the president abused his power,
or committed other high crimes and misdemeanors, bribery or
treasson, Congress “shall” impeach.
The American public has made it clear: we want impeachment
and we want the troops home.
If Congress doesn’t act on these two key issues, they will
not get that “big win” Conyers’ called for in 2008.
Some members of the Democratic Caucus may not even be back
if they keep this up.
Dave Lindorff’s most recent book is “The Case for
Impeachment” (St. Martin’s Press, 2006). His work is
available at www.thiscantbehappening.net.
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