Echoing the words of Senate colleagues, Sen. Dick Durbin
said Sunday that he would consider a motion to censure President Bush for authorizing warrantless surveillance, but only after a proper Senate inquiry into the program.
Speaking on
Fox News Sunday, Durbin (D-IL) said the March 13
censure resolution from Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) was "valuable ... (as) a catalyst to have the kind of hearings and the kind of deliberations as to what lies behind this warrantless wiretap situation."
"I can't rule anything out until the investigation is complete. I don't want to prejudge it," said Durbin, the Senate's No. 2 Democrat. "
But if this president or any president violates the law, he has to be held accountable."
Durbin called inquiries by the Republican-controlled Senate inadequate. Like many Democrats, he was unsatisfied after the Senate Intelligence Committee
voted along party lines two weeks ago against such an investigation. Instead, Congressional Republicans cut a deal with the White House to provide Congressional oversight for warrantless surveillance.
"We have a responsibility to ask the hard questions, to find out what the nature of the program is and whether the president violated the law," Durbin said.
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JABBS has
argued in favor of the censure -- and believes Americans of all political stripes should stand up in favor of a president following the law. Unfortunately, support for the censure has been minimal, with only Tom Harkin (D-IA) and Barbara Boxer (D-CA) signing on to the measure.
As JABBS has
noted, the White House
claimed it had "inherent authority" to conduct such surveillance, then undercut that argument by
supporting legislation from Sen. Mike DeWine (R-OH) to "further codify" (read: legalize) the surveillance program.
Republicans have clearly come out against further investigation of the program. As DeWine
said, "We don’t want to have any kind of debate about whether it’s constitutional or not constitutional." Americans deserve better. And if that means taking a circuitous route to investigate a seemingly illegal program, so be it. Feingold's censure motion is unlikely to pass, but it hopefully will force the Republican-controlled Senate to do the right thing, and thoroughly investigate the program.
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This item first appeared at
JABBS.