And when it comes to WikiLeaks, at the end of the last Congress we couldn’t get a whistleblower bill passed because ultimately the next whistleblower bill has to deal with WikiLeaks and the loss of these classified documents in a mature, bipartisan way. And we’re going to do that right off the bat because the kind of transparency we need is not to have somebody outing what is said by diplomats in private. And we need to change that, and that’s going to be a big part of our committee’s oversight, is to get that right so the diplomats can do their job with confidence and people can talk to our government with confidence. WALLACE: When you say that Attorney General Holder is guilty of all of those failures, should he step down? ISSA: Well, I think he needs to realize that, for example, WikiLeaks, if the president says I can’t deal with this guy as a terrorist, then he has to be able to deal with him as a criminal, otherwise the world is laughing at — at this paper tiger we’ve become. So he’s hurting this administration. If you’re hurting the administration, either stop hurting the administration, or leave.

Issa also dings Holder over ACORN, the New Black Panther Party, and a number of other cases that are outside this blog’s wheelhouse, but the WikiLeaks argument seems strange and contradictory. By proposing new legislation to combat future leaks, Issa seems to be acknowledging that current laws are insufficient. Yet he also attacks Holder for not aggressively going after WikiLeaks under those same laws. Issa is aware that as attorney general, Holder doesn’t write the laws he enforces, right?

The topic of whether the U.S. can prosecute WikiLeaks has been up for debate since the Afghan war logs came out in July, and no action has been taken despite numerous reports that the Justice Department was investigating the matter. Since the Espionage Act is rarely applied to outlets who receive classified information (evidently, there isn’t sufficient evidence to prove that Julian Assange actively abetted the leaks) and laws against trafficking in stolen government property were never set up to deal with computer files that are still in the government’s possession, it’s an awfully hard case to prosecute.

Some argue that it’s time for new laws to replace the outdated Espionage Act and prevent future leaks of this type. That’s perfectly within Congress’s right and may even come to pass this session. Others say the current laws are sufficient. But the logical extension of Issa’s remarks seems to be that he thinks Holder has just been insufficiently creative in coming up with a legal justification for prosecuting Assange. Not a very promising sign from the new government oversight chief.