Obama's 'Sister Souljah moment' on the surveillance bill
July 8, 2008
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BY LANNY J. DAVIS
Sen. Barack Obama's announcement that he would support the compromise bill providing court and congressional supervision of the president's Terrorist Surveillance Program and immunity for certain telecom companies that cooperated with it has led to a barrage of criticism from his "net-root" supporters on his campaign Web site and in much of the liberal blogosphere.
But the senator's position is not only correct on the merits from a pro-civil liberties and pro-privacy rights perspective. It also provided the senator an important chance to demonstrate his "Sister Souljah moment."
The latter phrase is a reference to the time when presidential candidate Bill Clinton, in a defining moment in 1991, stood up to the black rap star for her anti-white attacks in some of her lyrics. The phrase has since has become a metaphor for a Democrat showing the political courage to stand up to his or her liberal-left base, rather than pandering to it.
Sen. Obama's change of position has angered some of his more liberal supporters -- but, I submit, only because they don't appreciate the significant legal restrictions placed on the administration's conduct of the Terrorist Surveillance Program by this legislation.
The compromise bill was essentially crafted by leading liberals in the House who see no inconsistency between civil liberties and privacy rights and protecting America from another 9/11 attack.
The compromise bill would provide strict supervision by the special FISA Court of all intelligence agency anti-terrorist surveillance activities, with strict time limits on renewal of court orders. It would require written findings and accountability by the Justice Department and individual warrants and court orders if any U.S. citizen is involved, directly or indirectly, in the surveillance. And importantly, it expands congressional oversight of the program, including the House and Senate Judiciary Committees, as well as the Intelligence Committees in both chambers.
Most of the liberal opposition concerns the provision of the legislation that would allow immunity from civil cases filed against the telecom companies that cooperated with the TSP and turned over customer data. Concern about such a precedent is understandable. Ideally it should not be a defense to violating privacy rights that a company uncritically chose to rely on bum advice from government officials. Some telecom companies courageously refused to cooperate.
But, on balance, the value of effecting immediate strict legal and congressional supervision of the TSP and the requirement for individual warrants for surveillance affecting U.S. citizens should outweigh concerns about such a precedent -- especially since the legislation grants immunity only to those companies that can prove to a court of law that they relied in good faith on governmental advice.
No doubt Sen. Obama has felt political pain to be attacked publicly by his most ardent supporters. But the benefit is that he has reminded voters that as president he would be more committed to the "solutions" business than to yield to the pressure to prove his ideological purity to his party's base.
Many of the swing voters who will decide the election have been waiting to see if Sen. Obama can resist such pressure. Now they have a good example that the answer is:
Yes he can.
Lanny J. Davis, former special counsel to President Clinton, served on President Bush's Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board and is now supporting Sen. Obama.
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