SENATOR CHARLES GRASSLEY, a phony-baloney putative "champion" of whistleblowers, is also a homophobic hick hack from Iowa, re-elected too many times, serving as a tedious termagant chump for TRUMP at age 91, now a lapdog and no longer a watchdog, From the New York Times:
Grassley, a Champion of Whistle-Blowers, Spurns Them in a Fight Over Bove
The senator’s treatment of whistle-blowers detailing allegations against Emil Bove, the Trump loyalist and appeals court pick, has had a chilling effect, critics say.

Senator Charles E. Grassley, Republican of Iowa, has been known for decades as a champion of whistle-blowers. But critics say he has retreated from his signature issue, smoothing a path for a Trump loyalist who was confirmed on Tuesday to a lifetime appointment on the federal bench.
The battle over Emil Bove III, the Trump ally and a top official at the Justice Department, some argue, has chilled the very efforts that Mr. Grassley, 91, has spent more than 40 years fostering.
Last month, a day before Mr. Bove testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee over his nomination to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, a former lawyer for the Justice Department, Erez Reuveni, filed a detailed complaint. It described Mr. Bove as a crucial player in pressuring department lawyers to mislead judges and ignore court orders in the administration’s frantic bid to send Venezuelan migrants to a high-security prison in El Salvador.
Mr. Grassley’s reaction was striking, particularly given that he has long trumpeted whistle-blower claims by law enforcement officials.
“The timing alone indicates that this was a coordinated political strike and there are other reasons to be skeptical” of Mr. Reuveni’s claims, Mr. Grassley said at the outset of Mr. Bove’s hearing.
Mr. Grassley’s treatment of whistle-blowers like Mr. Reuveni is discouraging others from talking to Congress, say lawyers and others representing government workers fired or demoted by the Trump administration.
Since Friday, two whistle-blowers came forward as the vote on Mr. Bove’s nomination neared. One offered evidence suggesting that Mr. Bove knowingly misled lawmakers during his confirmation hearing, while another signaled they had provided information months ago to the Justice Department inspector general confirming some of Mr. Reuveni’s allegations against Mr. Bove, according to lawmakers and advocates.
In a strange twist just before the vote on Mr. Bove, a lawyer for that third whistle-blower said that the inspector general’s office had recently notified them that the whistle-blower complaint was “lost” by that office. A spokeswoman for the inspector general did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
“Now more than ever, whistle-blowers need a champion among congressional Republicans who will listen in good faith to their claims of government abuse and work in a bipartisan fashion to hold culpable officials accountable,” said David Laufman, a former Justice Department lawyer who represents current and former government workers. “For many years, Senator Grassley was that champion. But under the current administration, he has shied away from doing what’s right.”
Speaking on the Senate floor on Tuesday, Mr. Grassley accused Democrats of trying “to weaponize my respect for whistle-blowers and the whole whistle-blowing process against me and, in return, against Mr. Bove.”
Mr. Grassley said he considered Mr. Reuveni a whistle-blower but added that “even if you accept most of the claims as true, there is still no scandal.”
When it came to the two people who more recently indicated they had important information to offer about Mr. Bove, Mr. Grassley said his staff was “stonewalled and given the runaround.”
Mr. Bove, the lawmaker said, has denied the thrust of the whistle-blowers’ allegations and denied misleading lawmakers in his congressional testimony.
The brute-force politics of confirmation fights often overshadow the policy goals of specific lawmakers, and that appears to be true in the case of Mr. Bove.
One former F.B.I. agent, however, speaking on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation, said that the more recent concerns about Mr. Grassley went back months. That former agent pointed to the senator’s effusive praise for Kash Patel during his confirmation hearing to be the F.B.I. director, saying those comments discouraged a number of current agents from telling Congress about their concerns.
But Jane Turner, a former F.B.I. whistle-blower who now serves on the board of the National Whistleblower Center, said Mr. Grassley had been “indispensable” to whistle-blowers, helping more than 1,000 share their accounts of wrongdoing.
“He saved my bacon 25 years ago,” Ms. Turner said, referring to her efforts to expose malfeasance in the bureau, leading to what she said was retaliation by her superiors. “Grassley stepped in and he wrote them a letter and said back off, and they did.”
After joining the Justice Department in January, Mr. Bove, a former criminal defense lawyer for Donald J. Trump, quickly emerged as a key driver of the changes underway at the department.
In February, he pushed federal prosecutors to drop criminal chargesagainst Mayor Eric Adams of New York, leading to a host of resignations. Weeks later, he pressed for criminal investigations of protesters at Columbia University that federal judges viewed skeptically. And in mid-March, according to Mr. Reuveni, Mr. Bove told Justice Department lawyers they may decide to ignore orders from federal judges to accomplish some of Mr. Trump’s immigration goals.
Stacey Young of Justice Connection, which advocates on behalf of current and former Justice Department employees, said the group had repeatedly talked to agency employees “who are too scared of retribution to internally report the fraud and abuse they’ve witnessed.”
Increasingly, she said, those employees no longer see Congress as a viable option, faced with the prospect of being discounted or criticized. Mr. Grassley and other lawmakers, she said, have only “contributed to the culture of fear that’s hindering meaningful transparency and accountability.”
Clare Slattery, a spokeswoman for Mr. Grassley, said whistle-blowers have “no greater champion” than the senator, who has “resurrected whistle-blowers’ careers, saved many brave individuals from financial ruin and passed numerous whistle-blower protections into law.”
Last week, Mr. Grassley heralded the work of other whistle-blowers, two agents from the Internal Revenue Service who accused the Biden administration in 2023 of undercutting and slow-walking a criminal case against former President Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s son Hunter.
In a letter to the White House, Mr. Grassley urged the Trump administration not to use the rapid downsizing of the federal work force as cover or an excuse to fire whistle-blowers.
“If that has happened, this would not only be unlawful but would also have a severe chilling effect on federal employees who would otherwise blow the whistle,” he wrote.
Devlin Barrett covers the Justice Department and the F.B.I. for The Times.
2 comments:
These so called conservatives make our systems into dysfunctional nightmares and then blame government itself and any victims they create for what they themselves cause. Bad philosophy depriving Americans of a bright future. Look for other countries to surpass the USA because of these people's antiquated ideology and philosophy.
So called called conservative Republicans are killing the country with their dereliction of duty and obstructing the progress of the country and just humanity in general.
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