Posted on 01/22/2002 4:29:03 PM PST by Jean S
WASHINGTON -- President Bush on Tuesday used his recess appointment power to put an official from a major accounting firm on the Securities and Exchange Commission, which is investigating the auditing work done for troubled energy trader Enron Corp.
Bush appointed Cynthia A. Glassman, a principal at the Big Five accounting firm Ernst & Young. She worked at the Federal Reserve Board from 1977 to 1986 as economist and senior economist and in other positions.
The accounting profession has come under heightened public scrutiny as a result of the collapse of Enron, and the SEC is investigating the auditing work done for the company by major accountant Arthur Andersen LLP.
Glassman, a Republican, has worked for Ernst & Young since 1997. She was director of commercial bank risk management from 1997 to 1999, and before that had been director of research and managing director at Furash & Co.
Glassman served with the board of governors of the Federal Reserve from 1977 to 1986. She holds a Ph.D. in economics from the University of Pennsylvania.
He also reappointed Isaac C. Hunt Jr., a Democrat appointed to the SEC by former President Clinton in 1996. Hunt's term recently expired. A graduate of the University of Virginia law school, Hunt was dean of Antioch School of Law in Washington from 1987 to 1995.
Bush made the appointments just a day before the opening of the second session of the 107th Congress. Because Bush exercised his authority while Congress was out of session, his appointees will be allowed to serve until Congress recesses again at the end of the year.
In other recess appointments Tuesday, Bush named:
_Deborah Matz and JoAnn Johnson to the board of the National Credit Union Administration.
_William B. Cowen and Michael J. Bartlett to the National Labor Relations Board.
So Washington didn't have wooden teeth, but had cow's teeth instead?
I'd let the wooden teeth myth endure, if I were you.
Thanks for the link.
Hahaha, I knew this Judge Kennedy was another corrupt appointment by the scumbag administration.
I just knew it.
I know and you know it's cheesy to turn around and complain about a tactic your guy has used in spades -- overcoming denied appointments, even. But why would fair play or logic stop the left from bitching about Bush's recess appointments?
Am I missing something?
You make a good point and I feel your pain.
This "BAD POLICY" was set in motion by the scumbag Democrats when they invented the concept of "borking" Presidential nominees who were perfectly qualified but did not fit an ideological mold. For example, if a judicial nominee respects the US Constitution, then he is pure poison to the scumbag Democrats and will never get confirmed (or even voted on). Yes, you can thank the scumbags for putting us on this "nasty road".
I'm glad Bush finally woke up. Every day he leaves a majority of Clintonoid Democrats in control of these important agencies, he risks big-time damage. If the SEC had come in with a partisan attack on his administration, which these slime are fully capable of doing, the media would jump all over it, and it would be too late to deal with the crisis.
This needs to be done all over the government and its agencies, because it's just not realistic to imagine that the Dems still ensconced in entrenched positions of power will be fair or reasonable or cooperative. They just don't play that way any more, as we have seen time after time the past eight or ten years.
Not at all. The rats are steaming and they know that complaining about the recess appointments is a loser from the git-go. They tried it a couple of weeks ago, remember, and not only did they get no traction, but they were called on their hypocrisy. And how dare they whine about the actions taken by a wartime President in response to a do-nothing Senate, LOL. The rats are tied up in knots, helpless and hopeless. You didn't miss anything - - there was nothing to miss.
Why???
Antioch Law School Clintonista ...
Why???
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