Bush administration scandals, as of January 18, 2005, according to Salon's Peter Dzikes, come to a grand total of 34 for the "first four years of George Bush's presidency ." (I couldn't find the link for this one at Salon. It was a doozy.)
Halliburton's Corruption Iraq's Decline Abu Ghraib Prison Torture CIA Pre-9/11 Intelligence Failures HHS Deceptive Ad Campaign HHS Scully Scandal Government-wide Accounting Problems Sex Education Misinformation CAPPS II Failures Real Costs of the Iraq War
It was less than one year ago, on April 20, 2004, Thomas R. Asher, writing for Tom Paine, headlined with Losing Control" -- "Echoes of Watergate fill the air: a president is charged with misdeeds. He is besieged by plans gone awry, betrayed by underlings blowing whistles, harassed by a once-compliant press and barraged by querulous demands for data, documents and testimony."
External links at Source Watch:
Bush's Inner Circle
Interactive web page. Bush's Cabinet Shows links to Corporate America.
Shannan Jones, The Bush cabinet: a government of the financial oligarchy, wsws.org, May 16, 2001.
Rule by a powerful, privileged class of the wealthy and their dependents we clearly have, and we already have a name for it: oligarchy. But what about the rule of the stupid? Sot-archy? Perhaps our hybrid form of governance should be called sotoligarchy Geov Parrish, Who's Who in the Bush Cabinet, AlterNet, January 16, 2001.
White House Cabinet
Alan Reynolds, The President's New Troupe: A Potentially Revitalizing Shake-Up in Bush Economic Team, Cato Institute, December 31, 2002.
William Safire, Behind Closed Doors, New York Times Op-Ed, December 17, 2003.
Matthew Harwood, Bush Administration Newspeak on Iraq, Common Dreams, December 17, 2003.
Bush Administration Proposes Fuel Economy Changes. New Weight-Based Proposal To Increase Pollution and Oil Dependence, Sierra Club, December 22, 2003.
Dana Milbank, Under Bush, Expanding Secrecy, Washington Post, December 23, 2003:
"Steven Aftergood, who directs the Federation of American Scientists' Project on Government Secrecy, says it is nothing less than a 'mutation in American politics' away from open government. 'There is an unwholesome change in the deliberative process unfolding before our eyes, 'he said. 'These are not technicalities. These are fundamental issues of American government that are now up for grabs.'"
Jason Leopold, O'Neill's Claims Against Bush Supported By 1998 'War' Letters to Clinton Signed By Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, liberalslant.com, January 19, 2004.
Linda O'Brien, How Many Degrees of Separation Between Bush and the People, Between Truth and Lies?, Common Dreams, January 22, 2004: "The Bush administration is filled with calculating people rather than with people who value truth. They are limited by that fact; it's impossible to hire honest people to fake compassion. So they don't know what genuine compassion cares about or how it should act and can't calculate forever what lies will be accepted as truth."
The Carpetbagger, May 18, 2004:
Update: One reader has alerted me to a helpful list of GOP ethics abuses that the Washington Post published yesterday. Only one of the nine on the list actually is under investigation right now, but they all deserve to be.
Second Update: Thanks to an outpouring of assistance from a variety of readers, here are four more GOP scandals that have been the subject of formal inquiries:
* The General Accounting Office is investigating the legality of White House "video news releases" -- news-like proganda paid for with tax dollars -- which contain highly questionable claims about the alleged benefits of Bush's Medicare plan. (Updated 3/25/04, thanks to reader K.L. for the tip.)
Yet another: It's 18 and I like it.
* The Treasury Department's inspector general's office has launched a "preliminary" investigation into whether officials were misused to calculate data for GOP talking points on John Kerry's tax proposals. (Updated 4/7/04)
Wait, I'm not done: Numero 19.
* The Federal Election Commission investigated the National Republican Congressional Committee and determined that the GOP illegally transferred donations to outside independent groups for assistance in the 2000 campaign. The NRCC was fined $280,000. (Updated 4/9/04)