- Anyone watching C-SPAN on July 8th, when Congressman
Bernie Sanders I-VT and a bipartisan coalition took to the floor to protect
the privacy of what Americans are reading and viewing on the internet,
got one hell of a civics lesson. In an extraordinary display, the usually
placid floor of the United States House of Representatives erupted as the
Republic majority demonstrated once again that winning is their only goal.
And democracy shouldn't be allowed to stand in the way.
-
- Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act -- a law hastily passed
in the wake of the horrendous 9/11 attacks -- greatly expanded the government's
authority to seize "business records" without any showing that
the person whose records are being seized is involved in any kind of wrongdoing.
These "business records" include files about what books innocent
Americans are borrowing from libraries and buying from booksellers.
-
- So, the amendment would have prevented the government
from using section 215 to go to the federal secret court to get an order
-- which the court is essentially powerless to deny -- requiring the disclosure
of Americans' reading records. The amendment was supported by a broad cross
section of members -- from progressives like Congressman Sanders, John
Conyers (D-MI) and Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) to conservatives like Butch Otter
(R-ID) and Ron Paul (R-TX).
-
- But the day before the vote, the White House significantly
upped the ante when the Administration issued a rare veto threat against
the bill in our amendment to protect readers' privacy passed. This was
Bush throwing down the gauntlet and his foot soldiers in the House Republican
leadership got the message. This was a must win.
-
- When the vote finally occurred on the amendment, the
typical 17 minute time limit expired and the amendment had won 219-201,
with almost 30 Republicans voting for the amendment. But wait! The Republican
presiding over the House didn't end the vote. Then the House Republican
leaders began the process of "persuading" errant Republicans
that supporting the President is more important than supporting our most
fundamental Constitutional rights. A couple of votes changed. Then supporters
of the amendment took to their feet demanding that the vote be closed.
-
- Shouts of "Shame, Shame, Shame" echoed through
the House Chamber as scores of angry members on the Democratic side took
to their feet. But the Republicans are apparently immune to such public
shaming, having become experienced at overturning fair votes in Florida
and on the floor of the House last year during the Medicare vote after
keeping that vote open for three hours.
-
- Finally, after keeping the vote open twice as long as
scheduled the Tom DeLay and company had threatened, cajoled, and enticed
enough Republicans to tie the vote at 210-210. To the jeers of the amendments
supporters the presiding Republican let the gavel fall and the amendment
was defeated on a tie vote.
-
- Ironically, the Republicans had subverted the most basic
underlying principle of a democracy -- that the will of the majority as
evidenced by a fairly taken vote should prevail -- in order to protect
the Bush Administration's abridgement of American civil liberties under
section 215 of the Patriot Act.
-
- Win at any cost. What a sad civics lesson for America's
children and for foreign countries who are supposed to look to America
as an example of democracy.
-
- - Joel Barkin is the Communications Director for Congressman
Bernie Sanders I-VT.
-
- © BuzzFlash.comÆ http://www.buzzflash.com/contributors/04/07/con04288.html
|