Aizle wrote:
This is not an Obama issue, this is a government issue.
Quote:
Solicitor General Elena Kagan argues in a friend of the court brief that local, state, and federal prosecutors must enjoy absolute immunity from citizen lawsuits – even when they sent innocent men to prison for life by fabricating incriminating evidence and hiding exculpatory evidence.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Solicitor_GeneralQuote:
The United States Solicitor General is the person appointed to represent the Government of the United States before the Supreme Court of the United States. Currently, the Solicitor General is Elena Kagan, who was confirmed by the United States Senate on March 19, 2009.
The Solicitor General determines the legal position that the United States will take in the Supreme Court. In addition to supervising and conducting cases in which the government is a party, the Solicitor General's office also files amicus curiae briefs in cases in which the federal government has a significant interest in the legal issue. The Solicitor General's office argues on behalf of the government in virtually every case in which the United States is a party, and also argues in most of the cases in which the government has filed an amicus brief. In the federal courts of appeals, the Office of the Solicitor General reviews cases decided against the United States and determines whether the government will seek review in the Supreme Court. The Solicitor General's office also reviews cases decided against the United States in the federal district courts and approves every case in which the government files an appeal.
She was appointed by and continues to serve at the discretion of Obama to be the legal advocate of the entire United States federal government. So yes, it is very much Obama's problem.
Aizle wrote:
Were any other person president, the position of the administration would be the same.
This is speculation. It may be true (I suspect it would be for the previous administration, at least), but it's still speculation. And it didn't happen under any other president, it happened under Obama. If the Solicitor General isn't the responsibility of the sitting president, then whose responsibility is (s)he?
But regardless of that, what you say is no defense. Essentially, it's like saying: "It's not my problem that I knocked over a liquor store, because other people knock over liquor stores too!" Pointing out that others would do the same does not absolve you of your own responsibilities.