How can they vote on something they don't dammned UNDERSTAND?
Congress in dark on terror program
Few briefed on CIA interrogation
By Rick Klein, Globe Staff | September 23, 2006
WASHINGTON -- As lawmakers prepare to debate the CIA's special interrogation program for terrorism suspects, fewer than 10 percent of the members of Congress have been told which interrogation techniques have been used in the past, and none of them know which ones would be permissible under proposed changes to the War Crimes Act.
Only about 40 of the 535 senators and representatives -- the top members of leadership in both parties, members of the House and Senate intelligence committees, and a small handful of others -- have been briefed on the past practices of the CIA program, which permits more aggressive interrogation tactics than those used by other agencies.
The lack of consultation means that senators and representatives will be voting next week to authorize a program that most know little about, raising questions about Congress's oft-repeated vow to increase its oversight of the war on terrorism.
``You're not having any checks and balances here," said Norman J. Ornstein, a resident scholar at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. ``It sure doesn't look to me as if they stood up and did anything other than bare their teeth for some ceremonial barking, before giving the president a whole lot of leeway. I find it really troubling."
Beyond the briefings received by the 40 senators and representatives, the three Republican senators who initially opposed the president's proposal -- John McCain of Arizona, Lindsey O. Graham of South Carolina, and John W. Warner of Virginia -- were given additional details of the CIA program as part of their negotiations with the White House, according to a congressional aide. The senators' offices declined to say what, if any, extra information they were given.
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2006/09/23/congress_in_dark_on_terror_program/