Posts with the tag Senate

In recent weeks the battleground of the FISA debate - including whether telecom immunity will be included, and whether Bush will get broad authority to wiretap without oversight - has shifted from the Senate to the House of Representatives. And while the Senate ultimately caved in to Bush's demands, it is - so far - a much different story in the House, where Democrats are showing the kind of fight that was sorely lacking from their Senate counterparts.   Read More »

Tomorrow will witness the final votes in the Senate on the remaining amendments to the Senate Intelligence Committee's immunity-giving FISA reform bill. When those votes are done, there will be a cloture vote on the bill as a whole, and 60 votes are needed to invoke cloture. Today Pat Leahy, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee - which offered a much better bill that Reid chose to not bring to the floor - announced he would join the Dodd's efforts to stop cloture. As reported by mcjoan at Daily Kos:

"This is signficant, in that one committee chairman, Leahy for the Judiciary Committee, is stating his clear opposition to the work of another chairman, Jay Rockefeller at Intelligence:

Tuesday, February 12 is a critical day in our fight to stand up for American values and preserve our freedoms while protecting our national security. The Senate is voting on amendments to FISA, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, the law governing the use of wiretaps and other means to conduct surveillance of foreign threats.

Unfortunately, the new FISA bill we'll be voting on still has many problems. I will do everything in my power -- including joining my colleague Chris Dodd in a filibuster against this legislation -- to fix it.

The procedure for tomorrow is that votes on the outstanding amendments will begin at 10:00. After these votes happen, they'll have the cloture vote. When Leahy and Dodd say they will filibuster, it means that they will vote against the cloture vote on the bill to continue debate. If they are successful in preventing 60 votes for cloture, the debate can continue for as long as 30 hours. If they fail to prevent cloture, Dodd has four hours reserved for him and his colleagues like Leahy to convince enough fellow Dems to vote against final passage."

Leahy has a contact tool to help mobilize pressure on the Senators - including Feinstein - to get them to oppose immunity and oppose cloture.

Glenn Greenwald explains, though, that mcjoan is wrong to call this a "filibuster" - there won't be any effort to hold up all of the Senate's business, that even if cloture is not invoked there would only be another 30 hours of debate. Further, the unanimous consent agreement that Reid, Dodd, and others made with the Senate GOP two weeks ago provides for 60-vote threshholds for key Democratic amendments, including Feinstein's, that are not actually expected to be achieved. The GOP gets to have the outcome of a filibuster here without having to go through the actual motions.

As usual, Greenwald offers some excellent framing, reminding us that these telecoms are *lawbreakers*:

Whatever else is true about these telecoms that are about to be granted this extraordinary gift from Congress -- no matter how many times they are lavished with the creepy Orwellian phrase "patriotic corporate citizens" -- it is undeniable that they are deliberate lawbreakers. That's why they need amnesty in the first place. Any amnesty advocate who denies that central fact is arguing from a position of deep dishonesty. Bestowing retroactive telecom amnesty is nothing more than the latest step in creating a two-class legal system in America, where most citizens suffer grave penalties if they break the law, while our most politically powerful and well-connected actors are free to do so with impunity.

Greenwald goes on to argue that the Blue Dogs in the House will likely play the same role Reid, Rockefeller and Feinstein have played in the Senate - enabling the Bush Administration's lawbreaking as well as that of those who aided them - but still sees value in trying to lobby the House anyway:

There is some small chance that the House will impede -- if not stop -- at least some of the more extreme Cheney/Rockefeller provisions. As The Nation's Ari Melber reports: "A trio of Democratic House Committee Chairmen [Dingell, Markey and Stupak] are stepping up the fight against President Bush's surveillance bill this week, vowing to beat back a controversial proposal to grant retroactive amnesty to companies accused of illegally spying on Americans . . . circulating a letter urging their colleagues to stand firm and keep amnesty out of the final spying bill.

Unfortunately, the House "Blue Dogs" are basically the House version of Jay Rockefeller and Harry Reid and can, and likely will, single-handedly ensure that the House joins the Senate in complying in full with Bush's demands. But as long as the prospect remains that it can be stopped in the House -- and "an ACLU spokesperson told The Nation that the action by House leaders is the only 'ray of hope' to scuttle amnesty" -- it is worth trying. We'll have a petition and various action steps posted tomorrow once the Senate votes in favor of warrantless eavesdropping and telecom amnesty."

The Courage Campaign has been leading the effort to get Senator Feinstein to stand up for our Constitution and to support Dodd's efforts to block cloture. Visit our FISA page for more information, including our in-depth report explaining why Feinstein's "good faith" amendment is such a bad idea. Call Senator Feinstein and tell her to protect your rights and stop lawbreakers from getting away with it:

Call one of following phone numbers (if one is busy, call the next number):

202-224-3841 (Washington, DC)
310-914-7300 (Los Angeles)
415-393-0707 (San Francisco)
619-231-9712 (San Diego)
559-485-7430 (Fresno)

If Senator Feinstein is not your Senator, please call the Capitol switchboard toll-free to contact your Senator:

1-800-828-0498

 

Just to show that I give equal time to acknowledgement, as I do to censure, I have written to Harry Reid to thank him for maneuvering to cancel the Thanksgiving Recess. This is as momentous a step as Senator Daschle's engineering of what I call the Jeffords Jump (when Tom Daschle talked Jim Jeffords into leaving the Republican Party, thereby changing the makeup of the Senate, which reverted - unfortunately, for a short period of time - to Democratic Majority.)

"Thank you Senator Reid, for putting a grain on the GOOD side of the
balance: preventing Bush from installing other ideologues in key positions in government. I call you on every BAD move you've made and constantly write you to take actions that put your tenure in peril, so I thought it was only fair to congratulate you when you take a difficult step (I am aware that you walk a tightrope as leader of the Senate) that is the right thing to do, given the situation this White House has taken to use every possible dodge of the Law to further their nefarious agenda.

I have joined a group of Democrats who have put a moratorium on our
donations and volunteering to the Democratic Party, until you put an end to the War. We have pledged to continue donating both time and money to those Democratic candidates who back our Democratic values. In honor of your bold move, I am donating to the amount I would have given to the DSC to your campaign.

Happy Thanksgivingless RecessThanksgiving to you!"

I hope those of you who read this blog take similar actions. Thanks to quick Internet activism, we were able to stop Dianne Feinstein (so far!) from taking immunity for the telco's to the FISA law revision (unfortunately that fight is still going on in the Senate, please join the efforts to stop another chink in the Constitution) so we have the power to change what these politicos do. Please join the struggle to repair Checks and Balances so admirably put together in our Constitution, which has been the foundation of this "noble experiment in Democracy" for over 200 years and BushCo - in but 7 years (a brief period of time that has felt like aeons!) has put well on its way to annulment.   Read More »
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