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Dodd Beats Back Bush Spying Bill


From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Tue, 18 Dec 2007 04:52:37 -0800


________________________________________
From: Richard Forno [rforno () infowarrior org]
Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2007 7:42 AM
To: Blaster
Cc: David Farber
Subject: Dodd Beats Back Bush Spying Bill

 Dodd Beats Back Bush Spying Bill

Mon Dec 17, 10:50 PM ET

http://news.yahoo.com/s/thenation/20071218/cm_thenation/45261018&printer=1;_
ylt=AnihohfSQL0_vb7FgfTrdmI__8QF

The Nation -- After waging an all-out battle against the Bush administration
and leaders of his own party, Senator Chris Dodd achieved a legislative
victory on Monday, halting President Bush's attempt to rush a Senate vote on
a bill granting retroative amnesty to companies accused of illegally spying
on American citizens.

"Today we have scored a victory for American civil liberties and sent a
message to President Bush that we will not tolerate his abuse of power and
veil of secrecy," Dodd said in a statement distributed by his presidential
campaign. "The President should not be above the rule of law, nor should the
telecom companies who supported his quest to spy on American citizens," he
added.

The news was also cheered by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which is
suing over allegedly illegal domestic spying in Hepting v. AT&T. "The
biggest hero today is Senator Dodd, who recognized the profound
Constitutional issues at stake in taking this key issue away from the
courts, and refused to let it be rammed through the Senate without a fight,"
said Cindy Cohen, the group's legal director. "Over the holiday break we
hope that many Senators will listen to their constituents who want them to
stand up for the Fourth Amendment," she added.

Halting the amnesty bill was also a victory for the netroots, which
ferociously backed Dodd's legislative strategy and pressed Harry Reid, who
ultimately backed down by announcing he would delay the vote until January.
Over half a million people lobbied against the bill via email, Democratic
bloggers rallied support and pressed the presidential candidates, and MoveOn
targetted specific Senators to back Dodd's efforts. "No president should be
able to work with corporations to break the law and then use Congress to
cover up the crimes," wrote MoveOn's Nita Chaudhary, urging web activists to
lobby Congress on Monday morning. "Holding the phone companies accountable
may be the only way that the American people find out the extent of the Bush
administration's illegal actions," she added.

While Dodd's effort shows that a little leadership and backbone can get
results, the battle is far from over. Bush is demanding that Reid get the
spying bill passed -- with retroatctive amnesty -- in January, when the
critical fight over accountability for spying could be overshadowed by a
presidential campaign in full swing. The Constitution-netroots wing of the
Democratic Party will keep fighting for accountability, thankfully, but it's
up to the presidential candidates and the Senate leadership to ensure that
Bush does not steamroll the rule of law once again.



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