Item: Congressman Peter Welch, D-Vt., to meet with Vermont impeachment group Saturday.
It seems like Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vt., is willing to do whatever it takes to keep the pro-impeachment crowd in Vermont happy, even if he himself doesn't favor having the House spend time drawing impeachment counts against President Bush or Vice President Cheney -- and even though the Democratic-controlled Vermont House deep-sixed an impeachment resolution 87-60 late last month.
Exhibit A: Under pressure from the group that staged pro-impeachment sit-ins recently at his office and at Sanders' and Leahy's shops, Welch agreed to a sit-down, one-hour session with pro-impeachment forces this Saturday in Hartford.
But that wasn't good enough for the impeachment aficionados. They said the 9 a.m. start time was just too early. And one hour was too little time. So the impeachers bombarded his office with a flurry of phone calls this week, finally prompting Welch to change the time to 11 a.m., and expand the session to 90 minutes.
Good for him. But, instead of thanks, impeachment leader James Leas wrote in a widely distributed e-mail Tuesday that move by Welch was proof the group had caught Welch in a conspiracy to stick it to the impeachers. And only the righteous efforts of people like Leas kept Welch from getting away with it.
"As we suspected there were other times! Peter Welch changed his mind about gaming the schedule to discourage Vermonters from coming," Leas wrote. "The public forum with Peter Welch to discuss impeachment will now be from 11am to 12:30pm this Saturday at the Hartford High School in White River Junction. Once again the beautiful voices of the people of Vermont prevailed upon our leaders. "
Earlier in the week, Leas had taken the same tone in an e-mail to Tricia Coates, Welch's Vermont office manager. Here's part of what he said:
"While people are incredibly dedicated to ending this war and impeaching Bush and Cheney they can identify a setup when they see it... They do not want our Congressman to be gaming the timing, location, notice, and duration of the meeting in a way that thwarts people's attendence or discourages them from coming. Particularly when our constitution and so many human lives are at stake."
Fair and balanced criticism of Welch? You decide.
-- Sam Hemingway