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PREMEDITATED MERGER Senator thrashes Bush's Mexican truck hat danceTells defiant Cabinet member in hearing, 'Your arrogance will have consequences'Posted: March 12, 2008 5:13 pm Eastern By Jerome R. Corsi
"I regret supporting your nomination to be secretary of transportation," Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., told Peters. "Your legal counsel is giving you bad advice that unfortunately you have willingly accepted." Dorgan charged the Department of Transportation was "hell-bent on proceeding with this pilot program" regardless of safety concerns the agency's inspector general continues to document. "You believe you have found a loophole, but you are making a very big mistake," Dorgan warned Peters. "This is a slap in the face of Congress," he declared, "and your arrogance will have consequences." (Story continues below) Dorgan joined with Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., and Reps. Jim Oberstar, D-Minn, and Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., in a bipartisan, bicameral request for the General Accountability Office to investigate the DOT's decision to continue the cross-border Mexican truck demonstration project. The lawmakers charged DOT has violated the Antideficiency Act, which specifies both civil and criminal penalties when federal government officials spend money not appropriated by Congress. Still, Peters indicated the Department of Transportation was determined to persist with the Mexican project even if a three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals should order DOT to stop in response to a suit brought by the Teamsters. "We will appeal any adverse court decision to the Supreme Court," Peters told the committee, "but we have no plan right now to stop the current cross-border Mexican truck demonstration project." As WND reported, the Senate voted 74 to 24 in September to prohibit the DOT from using any funds in its fiscal year 2008 budget for the truck project, a measure signed into law by President Bush Dec. 26 as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act. The Bush administration, however, decided to proceed with the program, contending the congressional language prohibited only the creation of future pilot programs, not the current one. "This is sheer nonsense," Dorgan told Peters, opening what turned out to be a very tense hearing. "I have a letter from the Senate legislative counsel, who drafted this provision. The letter states very clearly that the amendment passed by Congress 'intended to preclude the carrying out of any demonstration program, including the pilot program put into effect in September 2007." DOT general counsel D.J. Gribbin, accompanying Peters at the hearing, asserted the exact legislative language prohibited the department only from spending 2008 funds "to establish" any new programs. Gribbin further argued that by not specifying "establish or implement," Congress did not prohibit DOT from implementing a project that already had been established when the Dorgan amendment passed, regardless of what Congress may have intended. In the following exchange, Dorgan expressed outrage, charging that Peters and the Bush administration were engaging in an exercise to parse words, when the legislative intent of Congress was clear. "You know better than that," Dorgan chided Gribbin. "I find it a creative way to read the statute, but everybody disagrees with you." Dorgan produced a chart quoting Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., on the floor of the Senate the evening the Dorgan amendment passed, saying, "Unfortunately, the Senate has voted 74 to 24 to prevent the pilot from going forward." "Everybody understood what we were voting for," Dorgan countered. "The vote was an overwhelming expression of the Senate to block the cross-border Mexican truck demonstration project, and everybody knew it." Also appearing with Peters was Calvin L. Scovel III, the DOT inspector general. Scovel's office issued an interim report Monday on the demonstration project which concluded that not every Mexican truck entering the U.S. was undergoing the safety checks Peters initially had promised Congress. "The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has yet failed to implement key quality control elements that the Department of Transportation assured Congress would now be in place," Scovel was forced to admit. "We simply don't know if every Mexican truck has been inspected every time it enters the United States," he conceded under intense questioning from Dorgan. In a statement issued Monday, Dorgan said the Transportation Department "is not above the law." "When Congress passes a law that says no funds can be used for this program, we mean no funds can be used for this program," he said. "The Department of Transportation cannot simply pick and choose which laws they want to follow and which laws they want to break."
Media wishing to interview the author of this article, please e-mail Tim Bueler.
Related special offers: For a comprehensive look at the U.S. government's plan to integrate the U.S., Mexico and Canada into a North American super-state – guided by the powerful but secretive Council on Foreign Relations – read "PREMEDITATED MERGER," a special edition of WND's acclaimed monthly Whistleblower magazine. Get Tom Tancredo's new book, "In Mortal Danger," from the people who published it – WND Books.
Previous stories: Heads to roll? Mexican trucks in U.S. sparks firing call Mexican trucks defy Congress, still roll Congress cuts funding for Mexican trucks Mexican trucks roll on despite opposition Bush officials team with Mexico to defend trucks Satellite tracking mandated for Mexican trucks Senate votes to kill Mexican truck demo Senator moves to block Mexican trucks NAFTA Superhighway plans advance south 1st Mexican truck rolls across border under cover of darkness Mexican trucks approved for long-haul trips in U.S. Mexican rigs hitting U.S. pavement today Snow not buying Hoffa's 'disaster' description Hoffa: Mexican trucks are disaster for U.S. San Antonio developing NAFTA inland port Jailed border agents case tied to Mexican trucks 114 congressmen: Why is DOT ignoring law? White House presses Senate to allow Mexican trucks Truckers demand feds come clean on Mexican rigs Mexico announces date for trucks to roll in U.S. Feds stonewall on Mexican trucks Now U.S. trucks to cruise Mexico Teamsters sue to halt Mexican truckers Truckers with criminal record could access U.S. Mexican trucks to enter U.S. in 15 seconds Angry truckers to encircle D.C. with 'blockade' Mexican truck stampede to hit U.S.! Congressman moves to block Mexican trucks Roadblocks for Mexican trucks in U.S. It's official: Mexican trucks coming Mexican truckers to hit U.S. roadways next year NAFTA superhighway to mean Mexican drivers, say Teamsters Jerome R. Corsi is a senior staff reporter for WND. He received a Ph.D. from Harvard University in political science in 1972 and has written many books and articles, including his best-sellers "America For Sale," "The Obama Nation" and "The Late Great USA." Other books include "Showdown with Nuclear Iran," "Black Gold Stranglehold: The Myth of Scarcity and the Politics of Oil," which he co-authored with WND columnist Craig. R. Smith, and "Atomic Iran."
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