Tuesday, February 8, 2011

It's a start - but why only 148 against?


I'm delighted to see that an attempt to renew three of the most obnoxious, intrusive and privacy-trashing provisions of the so-called Patriot Act has failed in the House of Representatives. Yahoo! News reports:

The House on Tuesday failed to extend the life of three surveillance tools that are key to the nation's post-Sept. 11 anti-terror law, a slipup for the new Republican leadership that miscalculated the level of opposition.

The House voted 277-148 to keep the three provisions of the USA Patriot Act on the books until Dec. 8. But Republicans brought up the bill under a special expedited procedure requiring a two-thirds majority, and the vote was seven short of reaching that level.

The Republicans, who took over the House last month, lost 26 of their own members, adding to the 122 Democrats who voted against it. Supporters say the three measures are vital to preventing another terrorist attack, but critics say they infringe on civil liberties. They appealed to the antipathy that newer and more conservative Republicans hold for big government invasions of individual privacy.

. . .

The Patriot Act bill would have renewed the authority for court-approved roving wiretaps that permit surveillance on multiple phones. Also addressed was Section 215, the so-called library records provision that gives the FBI court-approved access to "any tangible thing" relevant to a terrorism investigation.

The third deals with the "lone-wolf" provision of a 2004 anti-terror law that permits secret intelligence surveillance of non-U.S. people not known to be affiliated with a specific terrorist organization.

Sen. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., the former Judiciary Committee chairman who authored the 2001 Patriot Act, urged his colleagues to support the extensions, saying they were needed as a stopgap until permanent statutes could be agreed upon.

. . .

But Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, said Republican supporters of the tea party movement should show their opposition to big government by joining Democrats in opposing the measure.

"How about the Patriot Act, which has the broadest reach and the deepest reach of government to our daily lives?" he asked.

. . .

Michelle Richardson, legislative counsel of the American Civil Liberties Union, said she was "glad to see there is bipartisan opposition to the Patriot Act 10 years later." The ACLU is a strong opponent of the three provisions, saying they lack proper and fundamental privacy safeguards.


There's more at the link.

It's strange for me to find myself siding with Dennis Kucinich and the ACLU . . . but on this issue, they're right. The Patriot Act has generated enormous controversy, and justifiably so - it's a fundamentally flawed piece of legislation. In my opinion, and that of many other critics, more than a few of its provisions fly in the face of our constitutional rights. I'm very glad that at least some Republican Representatives opposed this measure; but I'm very angry that a substantial majority in Congress voted to pass it, even though it wasn't approved, in terms of the rules governing the passage of this particular type of motion.

Why do so few of our Congresscritters get it? Weren't they listening last November?

I fear we're going to have to repeat the lesson . . . and kick out a bunch of the deafer ones while we're at it!

Politicians! Grrr!





Peter

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I fear we're going to have to repeat the lesson . . . and kick out a bunch of the deafer ones while we're at it!

I couldn't agree more, Peter; repeated doses of medicine like that administered last November will be required. Or, in Marine-speak, we'll be forced to beat them about the head and shoulders until yhey get the message. I hope the American electorate can stay focused that long.

Leatherneck

Dad29 said...

So happens I live in Sensenbrenner's district. Historical: the first "Patriot Act" was opposed by Sensenbrenner AND Feingold (talk about opposites).

The revised Act is in force. Sensenbrenner wanted to force "discussions" of the three provisions by this vote. Instead, the TEA Party folks dumped the provisions into the Atlantic.

Good for them.

The "old bulls", Sensenbrenner among them, are frankly more protective of Government than of the rights of citizens. This reflects time-in-DC, not necessarily core conservative theory.

Anyway, they're protecting the wrong object, and I was pleased to see it go down.