Sen. Chris Dodd prevailed in his noble stand against the National Surveillance State of George W. Bush.
The Senate late Monday delayed its consideration of a vote on a new government eavesdropping bill until January.Feingold, Ted Kennedy and other Democratic senators spoke passionately on the floor about holding the line against Bush's determination to spy on American citizens free of restraint or accountability.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid delayed the bill because there were more than a dozen amendments planned, and not enough time left on the legislative calendar to manage them.
"Everyone feels it would be to the best interests of the Senate that we take a look at this when we come back after the first of the year," said Reid, D-Nev.
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Senate leaders hoped to decide this week whether to shield the telecommunications companies from the roughly 40 pending civil lawsuits alleging violations of communications and wiretapping laws. The White House says if the cases go forward they could reveal information that would compromise national security. If they succeed, the companies could be bankrupted.
The companies were helping the Bush administration carry out the so-called Terrorist Surveillance Program, a still classified effort that intercepted communications on U.S. soil without oversight from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court from Sept. 11 to January 17, 2007.
"For the last six years, our largest telecom companies have been spying on their own American customers," said Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn.
Dodd spoke for several hours and threatened a filibuster, vowing to use "all the tools" at his disposal to prevent the bill's passage. After Democratic leaders pulled the bill, he issued a statement saying, "Today we have scored a victory for American civil liberties and sent a message to President Bush that we will not tolerate his abuse of power and veil of secrecy."
"This program is one of the worst abuses of executive power in our nation's history," said Sen. Russell Feingold, D-Wis. "It's time for congress to state, when we pass a law we mean what we said," Feingold said.
Republicans, on the other hand, shamed themselves. Their arguments in favor of telecom immunity amounted to nothing less than a plea to abandon the rule of law. Their willingness to trade their rights as citizens for the protection of a benevolent dictator is simply disgraceful. How they live with themselves, I don't know.
1 comments:
they left any conscience they had at the door when they decided to campaign for congress. they are just drones to the dictator.
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