The Republican-led Senate Judiciary Committee plans to
hold a hearing this week on a call by Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) to censure President Bush for authorizing a warrantless surveillance program.
Committee chairman Arlen Specter (R-PA) has opposed censure -- as has the vast majority of the Senate. But although approval of the March 13
censure resolution is highly unlikely, the hearing will most likely serve the purpose of providing a forum for debate of warrantless surveillance.
Democrats have been unhappy with the perceived effort by Senate Republicans to sweep the debate over warrantless surveillance under the rug, culminating with the Senate Intelligence Committee
voting along party lines three weeks ago against an investigation of the program. 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," Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL)
said last week.
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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. While legislation would legalize the program going forward, it doesn't address that the program was illegal for four-plus years.
Republicans have in the past 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 should hope that the Republicans on the judiciary committee agree to a fair investigation of warrantless surveillance, even if it means determining Bush was wrong.
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This item first appeared at
JABBS.