TPMMuckraker

At Bush DoJ, Dems Need Not Apply

As if the politicitization of the Justice Department wasn’t plain enough already…

The Bush administration’s purge of the Civil Rights Division has been well documented — how career attorneys and analysts have been driven out and replaced with hard-line conservatives with little civil rights experience.

But it’s not just in the Civil Rights Division that hiring practices have changed. According to a group of anonymous Justice Department employees who’ve penned a letter to the House and Senate judiciary committees, all possible entry-level hires at the Justice Department are now being screened by the deputy attorney general’s office. And they seem to be looking for something in particular. (Update: You can read the letter here (pdf). It was obtained by John Bresnahan of The Politico.)

According to their letter, here’s what happened when some of those employees sat down with Michael Elston, chief of staff to DAG Paul McNulty (both of them key figures in the U.S. attorney purge). They wanted to know why Elston’s office had struck a number of promising applicants from the list of interviewees. From The Politico:

…Elston “was offensive to the point of (being) insulting.”…

“Claiming that the entire group had not ‘done their jobs’ in reviewing applicants, (Elston) said that he had a ‘screening panel’ to go over the list and research these candidates on the Internet; he refused to give the names of those on his ‘panel,’” the career employees wrote. “Mr. (Elston) said that people were struck from the list for three reasons: grades, spelling errors on applications and inappropriate information about them on the Internet.”

So, in their own words, the career employees did some checking of their own. They reportedly detected a “common denominator” for “most of those” struck from the interview list: They had “interned for a Hill Democrat, clerked for a Democratic judge, worked for a ‘liberal cause’ or otherwise appeared to have ‘liberal’ leanings. Summa cum laude graduates at both Yale and Harvard were rejected for interviews.”

Meanwhile, Regent University grads have no problem getting their foot in the DoJ’s door.

Update: House Judiciary Chairman John Conyers (D-MI) reacts:


“I take any accusations of undue politicization of career staff seriously. We have already identified concerns in Department’s Civil Rights Division. These new accusations are clearly something we will want to consider as well.”

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