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As featured on p. 218 of "Bloggers on the Bus," under the name "a MyDD blogger."

Friday, March 31, 2006

Leahy on Censure

A very calm, reasoned, intelligent statement that is probably as close as I'm going to see to my opinion on the matter. Nobody in the Administration will cooperate with an investigation, and based on what little we know right now, we know the President broke the law. The burden of proof rests with him to explain why. A long excerpt:

After this hearing, we will have heard from a total of 20 witnesses.  Of those, only one had any knowledge of the spying activities beyond what he had read in the newspapers.  That witness was Attorney General Gonzales, who flatly refused to tell us anything beyond “those facts the President has publicly confirmed, nothing more.”  [...]

Because the Republican-controlled Congress has not conducted real oversight, and because the attempts this Committee has made at oversight have been stonewalled by the Administration, we do not know the extent of the Administration’s domestic spying activities.  But we know that the Administration has secretly spied on Americans without attempting to comply with FISA.  And we know that the legal justifications it has offered for doing so, which have admittedly “evolved” over time are patently flimsy.  I therefore have no hesitation in condemning the President for secretly and systematically violating the law.  I have no doubt that such a conclusion will be history’s verdict.

History will evaluate how diligently the Republican-controlled Congress performed the oversight duties envisaged by the Founders.  As of this moment, history’s judgment of the diligence and resolve of the Republican-Controlled Congress is unlikely to be kind.  

Our witnesses today will address whether censure is an appropriate sanction for those violations.  I am inclined to believe that it is.  If oversight were to reveal that when the President launched the program, he had been formally advised by the Department of Justice that it would be lawful, that kind of bad advice would not make his actions lawful, but might at least provide something of an excuse. 

If, on the other hand, he knowingly chose to flout the law and then commissioned a spurious legal rationalization years later after he was found out, he should bear full personal responsibility.  To quote Senator Graham from an earlier point in his congressional service, when he bore the weighty role of a House Manager in a presidential impeachment trial:  “We are not a nation of men or kings, we are a nation of laws.”

I have said before that this Committee needs to see any formal legal opinions from this Administration that address the legality of NSA practices and procedures with respect to electronic surveillance.  The American people have a right to know whether or not their President knowingly chose to flout the law when he instructed the NSA to spy on them. 

That is why our next step should be to subpoena the opinions.  We know the President broke the law – we should find out why.


I also support Sen. Schumer's call to fast-track the various lawsuits over this program right to the Supreme Court, so we can get a binding judge's ruling on the program. Discovery of the legal opinions used to make the case for the program is essential as well. Leahy brings the number to 4 of those in favor of the censure resolution, with 2 other leaners (Maybe Leahy sees himself as a leaner and not a supporter). That's pathetic, but there is a spot of gaining momentum in the Senate, at least.

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