November 13, 2005
BOY, ALBERTO REALLY WANTS THE NEXT COURT APPOINTMENT:
Civil Rights Focus Shift Roils Staff At Justice: Veterans Exit Division as Traditional Cases Decline (Dan Eggen, November 13, 2005, Washington Post)
The Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, which has enforced the nation's anti-discrimination laws for nearly half a century, is in the midst of an upheaval that has driven away dozens of veteran lawyers and has damaged morale for many of those who remain, according to former and current career employees.Nearly 20 percent of the division's lawyers left in fiscal 2005, in part because of a buyout program that some lawyers believe was aimed at pushing out those who did not share the administration's conservative views on civil rights laws. Longtime litigators complain that political appointees have cut them out of hiring and major policy decisions, including approvals of controversial GOP redistricting plans in Mississippi and Texas.
At the same time, prosecutions for the kinds of racial and gender discrimination crimes traditionally handled by the division have declined 40 percent over the past five years, according to department statistics. Dozens of lawyers find themselves handling appeals of deportation orders and other immigration matters instead of civil rights cases.
As with the mass exodus from CIA when Porter Goss took over, getting rid of these folks is the point. Posted by Orrin Judd at November 13, 2005 8:38 AM
This should have happened ten minutes after Bush was sworn in the first time, ditto at the CIA.
Posted by: erp at November 13, 2005 4:14 PMAlberto's barely scratched the surface. The deadwood that has accumulated there is expert at one thing: outlasting GOP political appointees. They will not be "pushed out" until the day their federal pensions max out, because they are unemployable otherwise.
Posted by: curt at November 13, 2005 8:18 PMFriend of mine who works at DoJ has said that the Civil Rights Division hasn't had any work to do for decades. Time to clean the place out and put the live ones back to work.
Posted by: Robert Schwartz at November 14, 2005 12:49 AM