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David Sirota: An Alternative Left-Right Strategy to Stop Warrantless Wiretapping

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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-08-07 10:29 AM
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David Sirota: An Alternative Left-Right Strategy to Stop Warrantless Wiretapping
http://www.openleft.com/showDiary.do;jsessionid=50FC3825ECB8667743C6A2AE33872F4D?diaryId=635

An Alternative Left-Right Strategy to Stop Warrantless Wiretapping
by: David Sirota
Wed Aug 08, 2007 at 07:00:00 AM EDT

This is the third in the regular series called Strategery, which is written by David Sirota and appears every other Wednesday on OpenLeft.


Democrats' capitulation to the White House on the issue of warrantless wiretapping was a move designed to make them look "tough" but which ended up making them look pathetically weak. The Washington Post's lede frames it best: "The Senate bowed to White House pressure last night and passed a Republican plan for overhauling the federal government's terrorist surveillance laws, approving changes that would temporarily give U.S. spy agencies expanded power to eavesdrop on foreign suspects without a court order." In other words, Senate Democrats got muscled by the most unpopular president in contemporary American politics - and they got muscled into using their congressional majority to pass the minority party's offensive proposal. This said, they still have a chance to fix things and regain an image of strength - but only if they now follow a high-profile alternative strategy.

Note the Library of Congress's website showing that while almost all of the 2008 appropriations bills funding the government have already passed the House, they are still awaiting Senate votes, and are further awaiting House-Senate conference committee votes. Any Senator can offer a floor amendment to the Defense Appropriations Bill or the Commerce/Justice/State Appropriations Bill banning the use of government funds for warrantless wiretaps. Similarly, any House or Senate lawmaker on the Appropriations Committee can offer an amendment in these bills' conference committees to do the same thing. If such an amendment became law, the warrantless wiretapping program may still remain technically "authorized" by Congress (though unconstitutional, of course), but the White House would be prohibited from actually using it.

This was precisely the strategy then-Rep. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) employed in passing legislation aimed at limiting the Patriot Act. Building a left-right coalition of progressives and libertarian conservatives like then-Rep. Butch Otter (R-ID), he used the Appropriations process - and the rules that allow such riders to be attached to spending bills - to pass his legislation through the Republican-controlled House. Back then, the Republicans used the murky conference committee arena to strip the legislation out of the final bill - but now that Democrats control the conference committee, it would seem that they would have a far harder time doing the same thing to an appropriations rider preventing the Bush administration from violating Americans' constitutional rights.

Undoubtedly, short-sighted, self-declared political "gurus" like Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) would likely oppose such a high-profile move in the same way he embarrassed himself by citing his "red state" candidates as the reason he pushed for reauthorization of the Patriot Act - even though many key "red state" candidates were actually campaigning against the Patriot Act in order to win over libertarian-leaning voters. Schumer displayed a shortsightedness that many Democratic "strategists" cloistered in Washington are afflicted with. They have never understood how to build left-right coalitions, why they are politically valuable, or how to really look strong on national security issues. They operate with the wholly outdated view that Americans automatically equate support for the Iraq War and unconstitutional presidential power grabs as "strength." (Note: Schumer did vote against this latest bill - perhaps he's learned something).

But whereas Democrats have sadly been too afraid to use Congress's power of the purse to stop the War in Iraq, they shouldn't be too afraid to use that power to protect Americans' freedoms. We know for a fact that the FISA courts already have extraordinary tools to process warrant requests (there is even a process to approve them retroactively so as to prevent federal agents from losing precious time in the hunt for terrorists). We know, in other words, that Congress passing an appropriations amendment like the one I've described would merely force the Bush administration to follow a law that does nothing to hurt our national security, and everything to protect our freedoms.

The beauty of this strategy, of course, is that it is available to individual Democrats who are unhappy with how their party's leadership is addressing the issue. Because appropriations bills are brought to the floor under open rules, any lawmaker can offer this amendment. Same thing within the Appropriations Committees themselves. Any appropriator can bring up such an amendment in conference committee.

more...

http://www.openleft.com/showDiary.do;jsessionid=50FC3825ECB8667743C6A2AE33872F4D?diaryId=635
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Aug-08-07 11:15 AM
Response to Original message
1. Maybe We Should All Disconnect Our Phones and Computers and Faxes
and see how long it takes AT&T, Yahoo, and the like to scream at Bush to desist. One month would probably do it.
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