Furthermore, during the June 28 segment, neither Henry nor Blitzer reported the reason cited for issuing the subpoenas. Henry simply referred to the “subpoena issue” and Blitzer only reported that the subpoenas sought “documents and testimony from White House officials.” In a June 27 press release, Leahy explained that the committee issued the subpoenas for “documents relating to the authorization and legal justification for the Administration's warrantless wiretapping program.” In letters accompanying the subpoenas, Leahy wrote: “Over the past 18 months, this Committee has made no fewer than nine formal requests to the Department of Justice and to the White House, seeking information and documents about the authorization of and legal justification for this program. All requests have been rebuffed.”
From the 4 p.m. ET hour of the June 28 edition of CNN's The Situation Room:
BLITZER: And joining us now from the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island, where the president delivered a speech earlier today, our White House correspondent, Ed Henry.
A lot of people suggesting, Ed, that the president had invested so much of his personal influence and prestige and power in trying to get this immigration bill through, a complete collapse today. What does it say about his ability to influence events on Capitol Hill and elsewhere over the next year-and-a-half?
HENRY: What it means is if it walks like a duck, talks like a duck, he's inching closer, closer to be a lame duck. And the fact -- and the clearest sign of that is when people in your own party are no longer afraid to take you on, on issue after issue.
On the immigration reform bill, the president made that personal appeal, a dramatic effort on Capitol Hill, face-to-face with Senate Republicans, and yet, in the end, only 12 Senate Republicans voted with him. So the vast majority went against him.
If you look on Iraq, the issue he was talking about today, you now have stalwart Republicans from red states, like Dick Lugar, standing up against the president, saying, “We can't wait till September. You need to change the policy now, because the increase in troops is not working.”
And then you look at the subpoena issue. That's not really about its own -- his own party. It's about the Democrats. And you look at the subpoenas that are arriving at the White House day after day on issue after issue. This president is moving closer and closer to lame duck, Wolf.
BLITZER: Well, on that subpoena issue, the Senate Judiciary Committee, what, they voted 12 to 3 in favor of issuing these subpoenas to get some documents and testimony from White House officials. It looks like there's going to be a constitutional showdown over this issue.
HENRY: Absolutely. It's very likely headed to the courts. That could be part of the White House strategy -- drag this out, because by the time there's a resolution, it's very possible that President Bush will be out of office, Wolf.
BLITZER: Ed Henry, reporting for us from Newport, Rhode Island. Ed, thanks very much.