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To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/13/2006 10:33:22 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
    [S]ome Democrats in Congress have decided that the 
President is the enemy.

Cheney Rips Feingold

Posted by H-Bomb
Ankle Biting Pundits
Date: Monday, 13 March 2006

Here’s what the Vice President said today on NSA terrorist spying:

<<< "The terrorist surveillance program has helped prevent attacks. It has protected American lives. And it remains essential to the safety and security of the United States of America. Yet instead of acknowledging the urgent need to track enemy communications in wartime, some Democrats in Congress have decided that the President is the enemy. The Junior Senator from Wisconsin, Russ Feingold, believes the terrorist surveillance program <snip> is grounds for censuring the President. The President clearly has the authority to direct the National Security Agency to collect the communications of our enemies in wartime, to defend the Nation against attack, to fulfill his Constitutional obligations and responsibilities as Commander-in-Chief, and to carry out the Congressional resolutions directing him to use all means necessary to defeat al Qaeda passed just a few days after 9/11.

"This outrageous position, that we ought to protect our enemy's ability to communicate as it plots against America, poses a key test for our Democratic leaders: Do they support the extreme and counterproductive antics of a few, or do they support a lawful program vital to the security of this Nation?

"The American people have already made their decision. They agree with the President. And our Administration's position is clear: If there are individuals inside our country talking with al Qaeda overseas, we want to know about it – because we will not sit back and wait to be hit again.

Good on ya, Mr. Vice President. Sounds familiar.
anklebitingpundits.com

Update: Some Dems appear to know the issue is a stinker for them.
michellemalkin.com

anklebitingpundits.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/13/2006 11:05:30 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Feingold Goes Off The Reservation

By Captain Ed on National Politics
Captain's Quarters

Senator Russ Feingold attempted to start his 2008 presidential campaign with a bang. In a move anticipated for the past few days, the Wisconsin Senator followed his opposition to the Patriot Act with a motion to censure George Bush for his approval of the NSA intercept program that has helped keep America safe from attack since 9/11. As soon as he introduced the motion, he fled the well of the Senate as the Republicans attempted to schedule an immediate vote on the censure:

<<< Democrats distanced themselves Monday from Wisconsin Sen. Russell Feingold's effort to censure President Bush over domestic spying, preventing a floor vote that could alienate swing voters.

A day of tough, election-year talk between Feingold and Vice President Dick Cheney ended with Senate leaders sending the matter to the Judiciary Committee.

Republicans dared Democrats to vote for the proposal.

"Some Democrats in Congress have decided the president is the enemy," Vice President Dick Cheney told a Republican audience in Feingold's home state.
>>>

If anyone expected the Democrats to make significant gains against the GOP, which has seen its popularity buffeted by scandals the past few weeks, that analysis obviously excluded the capacity for Democrats to shoot themselves in the foot. Only an idiot would attempt to make a president the enemy during wartime, especially for an action that he performed in defense of the country. In fact, the 9/11 Commission specifically scolded the Bush and Clinton administrations for not allowing the NSA to do its job and surveil international communications. The Republicans would be happy to have that debate, especially with someone who wouldn't vote to continue allowing counterterrorism agents to use the same legal tools provided to investigators in racketeering and child-pornography cases.

Fortunately for the Republicans, Feingold demonstrated that he is that big a fool. Other Democrats were not as sanguine about the proposal, sensing that scolding a president over a program supported by a solid majority of the electorate would fall flat with swing voters. After Bill Frist scheduled an immediate vote, Democrats objected, and when he scheduled a vote for tomorrow morning, they complained that Harry Reid had not been consulted on the motion. That sent a clear signal that Feingold had gone off the reservation, as no one who read a paper or watched the national news could have missed Feingold's highly-telegraphed move.

The notion of censure is silly on its face.
The administration has a solid case for its argument that the authorization for use of military force carries with it the implicit duty to monitor the communications of the enemy. If Congress wanted to challenge its legality, they could take the administration to the Supreme Court for a ruling. However, the result could well strangle FISA in its attempt to override clearly Constitutional duties for the commander in chief. Instead, Congress has just decided to pass another regulation like FISA rather than challenge Bush's effort -- because most members understand that only does Bush have a case, but that the Supreme Court would likely strip FISA of its pretensions in dictating how a wartime president can surveil the enemy.

Feingold may think this will put his presidential campaign on the map, but in reality it shows that even his fellow Democrats find it hard to follow him. Good luck in 2008, Russ.

captainsquartersblog.com

news.yahoo.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/14/2006 3:16:32 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
CENSURE? UM, NEVER MIND...

By Michelle Malkin
March 13, 2006

The Democrats are pulling an Emily Latella. Tim Chapman at Capitol Report has the scoop:

<<< ...Democratic Senator Russ Feingold has introduced a resolution that would censor the President of the United States for "eavesdropping" in the wake of 9/11. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, moments ago, made a unanimous consent motion that the Senate vote on the resolution tonight. Maryland Democrat Paul Sarbanes rose to object to the motion. Frist then motioned to vote on the resolution again tomorrow. Sarbanes objected, saying no vote should take place on the resolution until Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid had cleared the timing.

In other words, Democrats know this is a political stunt, without a chance of passage, but want to time it politically for maximum impact.

Later, Harry Reid took the floor to say he was offended that Frist would go to the floor and motion for unanimous consent on such an "important issue" without talking to him first.

Reid's two-facedness knows no bounds. Does he not remember last year taking the Senate floor and invoking Senate Rule XXI, thereby shutting down the Senate? When he made that parliamentary move to score political points over pre-war intelligence, he broke all Senate precedent by invoking the draconian measure without first seeking the compliance of the Senate Majority Leader as has always been done in the past.

Outrageous? Yes...Surprising? No... >>>

So amusingly pathetic.

michellemalkin.com

townhall.com

michellemalkin.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/14/2006 3:36:08 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
    So, 14% of the Democrats in the House support the 
impeachment probe for "misleading the public to go to
war," "authorizing torture,"
and they may add the
wiretapping of terrorists on as well before it's all over.
Of course, Bush didn't mislead the public, authorize
torture -- and the wiretapping of calls between US
citizens and foreign agents without a warrant is not only
legal, it would likely take a Constitutional Amendment to
strip him of that power.
    But, regardless of those facts, it seems to me that we 
have a pretty clear split between both parties that needs
to become an issue in the 2006 elections. Republicans
believe that we need to act aggressively to defend
Americans from terrorists who want to harm us and
Democrats believe that the President should be impeached
for acting aggressively to defend America from terrorists.
    That's why all Democrats running for reelection in 2006 
need to be asked, for the record, if they support the
impeachment of President Bush. In other words, do they
support the partisan attempt to undercut the Commander-in-
Chief, in a time of war, for purely political purposes or
are they concerned about defending America? That's
something the American people need to know before they go
to the ballot box in 2006.

John Hawkins

rightwingnews.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/15/2006 1:05:28 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
THE FEINGOLD CENSURE

Kathryn Jean Lopez
The Corner

From Cornyn's office:

Results of the Feingold Censure Resolution (S.Res. 398): Day 2

Democrat co-sponsors of Feingold Resolution: 0

al Qaeda communications intercepted by Feingold Resolution: 0

Terror attacks prevented by Feingold Resolution: 0

corner.nationalreview.com

cornyn.senate.gov



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/15/2006 1:15:49 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
CHAFEE & CENSURE

Kathryn Jean Lopez
The Corner

From theMilwaukee Journal Sentinel: One liberal GOP senator, Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island, offered some praise for Feingold, saying the resolution would be "positive" if it fueled debate over the legality of some policies in the war on terrorism.

corner.nationalreview.com

jsonline.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/15/2006 1:20:16 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Kingston on Feingold's Attempt To Censure Bush

Posted by Matt
Blogs for Bush

Yesterday, U.S. Rep. Jack Kingston (R-GA), a member of the Defense Appropriations Committee, issued the following statement regarding Senator Russ Feingold's attempt last night to censure the President for conducting surveillance on communications with al-Qaeda.

<<< "The fact that the Senate Democratic Leadership has failed to call this stunt what it is - political grandstanding - is outrageous. Senator Feingold's actions today reaffirm that the Democratic Party is more interested in playing politics than coming up with their own ideas.

"Do Democrats have another way to monitor surveillance on communications with al-Qaeda? Do Democrats have a better way to protect Americans from another terrorist attack?"

"Of course they don't, that's why Democrats are always willing to heckle the starting quarterback from the cheap seats but they are never willing to get in the game themselves.

"Not one Democrat has offered an amendment or a bill to repeal this important national security program. They like to harp about it at Democrat fund raisers and at red meat partisan clubs but when it comes to actually trying to stop it they don't have the guts. Once you get past their left wing rhetoric, even their own members know this is a vital program."
>>>

Apparently, Feingold went running from the Senate yesterday to avoid any more embarrassment over his censure resolution.

Rep. Marsha Blackburn also had a great one-minute speech on the Feingold censure attempt:

<<< Mr. Speaker --

Ten days ago Democratic Senators were calling President Bush weak on national security.

Now they're seeking to censure him for being too aggressive in going after terrorists.

Congressional Democrats have no serious plan for national security.

Oh, they have a plan to use the security issue in their campaigns.

They have a plan to try and kill strong anti-terrorism measures like the Patriot Act.

But they have no plan for actually securing our homeland.

Instead of supporting the Patriot Act, instead of supporting the intelligence community's work to monitor phone calls that could yield information that will save American lives -- Senate Democrats are going to push a motion to censure the President.

If they're pushing this censure in order to distract from the fact that they don't have a security plan -- it's not working.
>>>

No, it's not working... I've certainly noticed that the Democrats have done a lot of complaining without any proposing of anything new. Imagine, Democrats think they'll regain a majority in Congress without offering anything resembling leadership. Ha!

blogsforbush.com

exposetheleft.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/15/2006 1:54:23 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Their Real Agenda

By Ken Mehlman
GOP.com Blog

This week, liberal Democrat Russ Feingold called on the Senate to censure the President for a program that is successfully stopping terrorists. After months of searching, Democrat leaders are finally beginning to find their agenda: take away the tools America needs to fight terror. In the last 24 hours, fringe groups like MoveOn.org and Democrat leaders from John Kerry to Harry Reid to Dick Durbin have rallied to Feingold's side, praising his grandstanding as a "catalyst" for the investigation of the President.

Weakening our national security is their agenda. Is it yours? Sign the petition to tell the Democrat leaders to stop undermining the War on Terror with cheap political stunts.


gop.com


We are a nation at war. Our President has no more basic responsibility than to protect the American people and fight terrorists who want to kill us. It's one thing if a lone Senator wants our government to look the other way when an Al Qaeda terrorist contacts a sleeper cell inside the United States. It's entirely another when Democrat minority leader Harry Reid commends Feingold's censure move for "bringing [the terrorist surveillance program] to the attention of the American people."

Democrat leaders never miss an opportunity to put politics before our nation's security. And now, they would rather censure the President for doing his job than actually fight the War on Terror. It's what the MoveOn.org wing of their party wants, and now, it's their agenda -from the top of the ticket on down.

Make your voice heard. Tell Democrat leaderes to stop playing politics with national security by signing the petition now.

Also, please use this blog to share your comments on this important issue.

gop.com

gop.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/15/2006 5:28:04 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
    When the fever gets this hot in supposedly mainstream 
forums, Mr. Feingold is right to conclude that the facts
behind any censure or impeachment motion won't really
matter. All that will count is the politics, which means
it will come down to a question of votes in Congress. And
several leading Democrats have already raised the
"impeachment" card....
    ....Not only do they want to block his [Bush's] policies, 
they also plan to rebuke and embarrass him in front of
the world and America's enemies. And they want to do so
not because there is a smidgen of evidence that he's
abused his office or lied under oath, but because they
think he's been too energetic in using his powers to
defend America. By all means, let's have this impeachment
debate before the election, so voters can know what's
really at stake.

The Impeachment Agenda

Russ Feingold reveals what many Democrats really want.

The Wall Street Journal Editorial Page
Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Republicans are denouncing Senator Russ Feingold's proposal to "censure" President Bush for his warrantless wiretaps on al Qaeda, but we'd like to congratulate the Wisconsin Democrat on his candor. He's had the courage to put on the table what Democrats are all but certain to do if they win either the House or Senate in November.

In fact, our guess is that censure would be the least of it. The real debate in Democratic circles would be whether to pass articles of impeachment. Whether such an inevitable attempt succeeds would depend on Mr. Bush's approval rating, and especially on whether Democrats could use their subpoena power as committee chairs to conjure up something they could flog to a receptive media as an "impeachable" offense. But everyone should understand that censure and impeachment are important--and so far the only--parts of the left's agenda for the next Congress.

And not just the loony left either, though it's getting harder to distinguish them from the mainstream variety.
Mr. Feingold is hardly some Internet crank. He's a third-term Senator from a swing state who has all but announced his intention to run for the Democratic Presidential nomination in 2008. He was the first major Democrat to call for the U.S. to withdraw from Iraq, and half his party was soon demanding the same.

As a legal matter, Mr. Feingold's censure proposal is preposterous.
The National Security Agency wiretaps were disclosed to Congressional leaders, including Democrats, from the start. The lead FISA court judges were also informed, and the Attorney General and Justice lawyers have monitored the wiretaps all along. Despite a media drumbeat about "illegal domestic eavesdropping," Mr. Bush's spirited defense of the program since news of it leaked has swung public opinion in support.

But as a political matter, the Wisconsin Senator knows exactly what he's doing. He knows that anti-Bush pathology runs so deep among many Democrats that they really do think they're living in some new dictatorship. Liberal journals solemnly debate impeachment, and political-action groups have formed to promote it. One of our leading left-wing newspapers recently compared Mr. Bush to J. Edgar Hoover and Richard Nixon, as if there were even a speck of evidence that this White House is wiretapping its political enemies.

When the fever gets this hot in supposedly mainstream forums, Mr. Feingold is right to conclude that the facts behind any censure or impeachment motion won't really matter. All that will count is the politics, which means it will come down to a question of votes in Congress. And several leading Democrats have already raised the "impeachment" card.

California Senator Barbara Boxer loudly wrote four legal scholars late last year asking if the NSA wiretaps were impeachable. John Conyers, the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, has introduced a resolution calling for the creation of a "select committee to investigate the administration's intent to go to war before congressional authorization, manipulation of pre-war intelligence, encouraging and countenancing torture, retaliating against critics, and to make recommendations regarding grounds for possible impeachment."

In other words, everything that Mr. Bush has been accused of during the last five years, no matter how Orwellian or thoroughly refuted, will be trotted out again and used as impeachment fodder. And lest you think this could never happen, Judiciary is the House committee through which any formal impeachment resolution would be introduced and proceed. As the country heads toward 2008 and a Democratic nomination fight, John Kerry and Hillary Rodham Clinton would be hard-pressed to avoid going along with Mr. Feingold, Al Gore, and others feeding the bile of the censure/impeach brigades.

Which brings us back to Mr. Feingold's public service in floating his "censure" gambit now. He's doing voters a favor by telling them before November's election just how Democrats intend to treat a wartime President if they take power.

Not only do they want to block his policies, they also plan to rebuke and embarrass him in front of the world and America's enemies. And they want to do so not because there is a smidgen of evidence that he's abused his office or lied under oath, but because they think he's been too energetic in using his powers to defend America. By all means, let's have this impeachment debate before the election, so voters can know what's really at stake.

opinionjournal.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/15/2006 5:46:46 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Politics, Not Policy

Posted by John
Power Line

Yesterday, Senator Russ Feingold introduced a Senate resolution to censure President Bush for the NSA's "illegal" international terrorist surveillance program. Bill Frist proposed to put Feingold's resolution on for an immediate vote, but the Democrats blocked a vote, preferring to let the measure draw headlines in committee for a while longer.

Those with a sense of deja vu may recall the similar episode of Congressman Jack Murtha's resolution calling for immediate termination of the Iraq mission. The Democrats hailed Murtha's "courage" and welcomed the headlines that followed--did you know that Murtha is an ex-Marine?--but considered it dirty pool when the Republicans actually wanted to vote on Murtha's proposal. The vote was something like 402-3, but no matter--the Democrats got anti-administration headlines, which is what they were looking for.

Feingold's absurd resolution will meet a similar fate when it is finally voted on, but by then the Democrats will have moved on to something else--something equally frivolous, in which the news media will cooperate gladly. All of which may cause some voters to wonder how serious the Democrats are about the issues that concern the American people.

powerlineblog.com

washtimes.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/15/2006 11:43:23 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Censure Feingold

by Terence Jeffrey
townhall.com
Mar 15, 2006

Unlike Sen. Russell Feingold, the Wisconsin Democrat seeking to censure President Bush for ordering the interception of communications in and out of the United States involving persons with suspected links to al-Qaeda, Democratic President Franklin Roosevelt had no qualms about warrantless eavesdropping to protect the United States against attack.

Neither did Harry Truman.

There is a difference, however, between the eavesdropping Roosevelt and Truman authorized and the eavesdropping Bush is doing. Roosevelt and Truman did it in peacetime without congressional authorization. Bush is doing it during a war that Feingold voted on Sept. 14, 2001, to authorize.

Nonetheless, Roosevelt and Truman acted within their constitutional authority to defend the nation against attack. They were doing their duty, as is President Bush.

But in the Senate on Monday, while introducing his censure resolution, Feingold said, "The president's claims of inherent executive authority, and his assertions that the courts have approved this type of activity, are baseless."

FDR could not have agreed.
On May 21, 1940, the United States was at peace, but Roosevelt wasn't taking chances.
    "It is too late to do anything about it after sabotage, 
assassination and 'fifth column' activities are completed,"
Roosevelt wrote Attorney General Robert Jackson in a memorandum cited by Senate Intelligence Chairman Pat Roberts in a letter he sent last month to Senate Judiciary Chairman Arlen Specter.
    "You are, therefore, authorized and directed in such 
cases as you may approve, after investigation of the need
in each case, to authorize the necessary investigation
agents that they are at liberty to secure information by
listening devices directed to the conversation or other
communications of persons suspected of subversive
activities against the government of the United States,
including suspected spies. You are requested furthermore
to limit these investigations so conducted to a minimum
and to limit them insofar as possible to aliens."
(Emphasis added.)
Truman went further. Testifying before the Church Committee on Oct. 29, 1975, Attorney General Edward Levi quoted a letter that Attorney General Tom Clark sent Truman in 1946. Clark wanted to continue FDR's program. Warrantless eavesdropping, he argued, was needed
    "in cases vitally affecting the domestic security, or 
where human life is in jeopardy."
In his letter to Specter, Roberts notes that
    "Truman broadened the scope of the authorization by 
removing the caveat that such surveillance should be
limited 'insofar as possible to aliens.'"
Federal appeals courts have upheld the authority Roosevelt and Truman used.
    "(B)ecause of the president's constitutional duty to act 
for the United States in the field of foreign relations,
and his inherent power to protect national security in
the context of foreign affairs, we reaffirm ... that the
president may constitutionally authorize warrantless
wiretaps for the purpose of gathering foreign
intelligence,"
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ruled in the 1973 case of United States v. Brown.

Even after President Carter signed the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, which required warrants for domestic intelligence wiretaps, Carter's Justice Department went into federal court to defend warrantless wiretapping for national security reasons.

Truong Dinh Hung, a Vietnamese national living in the United States, and Ronald Humphrey, a U.S. citizen who worked for the U.S. Information Agency, had appealed their espionage convictions, which resulted from Humphrey passing classified documents to Truong, who sent them to Vietnamese officials in Paris in 1977.
    "Truong's phone was tapped and his apartment was bugged 
from May 1977 to January 1978,"
explained the Fourth Circuit's 1980 opinion in United States v. Truong.
    "The telephone interception continued for 268 days, and 
every conversation, with possibly one exception, was
monitored and virtually all were taped. The eavesdropping
device was operative for approximately 255 days, and it
ran continuously. No court authorization was ever sought
or obtained for the installation and maintenance of the
telephone tap or the bug. The government thus ascertained
that Humphrey was providing Truong with the copies of
secret documents."
Lo and behold, Carter's Justice Department claimed Carter had a "constitutional prerogative" to conduct this warrantless wiretap.
    "In the area of foreign intelligence, the government 
contends, the president may authorize surveillance
without seeking a judicial warrant because of his
constitutional prerogatives in the area of foreign
affairs,"
the court explained.

The judges agreed.
    "First of all, attempts to counter foreign threats to the 
national security require the utmost stealth, speed and
secrecy,"
they said.
    "A warrant requirement would add a procedural hurdle that 
would reduce the flexibility of executive foreign
intelligence initiatives, in some cases delay executive
response to foreign intelligence threats and increase the
chance of leaks regarding sensitive executive operations."
Does Bush have the same "constitutional prerogatives" in an authorized war that Carter had in peace? Feingold claims not, demanding censure of the president -- which ought to earn Feingold the censure of enlightened opinion.

Terence P. Jeffrey is the editor of Human Events.

Copyright © 2006 Creators Syndicate

townhall.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/16/2006 4:56:59 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Majority Leader Frist Guarantees a Vote on Feingold's Folly

By Hugh Hewitt

Majority Leader Bill Frist assured my audience that one way or the other, a vote will be taken on the Feingold censure motion, though it appears it will have to come through the Judiciary Committee, which means a delay of a couple of weeks.

The Republican majority on the Judiciary Committee should refuse all amendments to the Feingold resolution, and vote it to the floor with a recommendation of defeat.

hughhewitt.com

radioblogger.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/16/2006 5:42:18 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
It’s Legal

The solid legal basis for the administration’s surveillance program.

Byron York
National Review Online

EDITOR’S NOTE: On Monday, when Wisconsin Democratic Sen. Russ Feingold introduced a resolution to censure President Bush, he said, "When the President of the United States breaks the law, he must be held accountable." Bush, Feingold continued, "authorized an illegal program to spy on American citizens on American soil and then misled the Congress and the public about the existence and the legality of that program." Although few Democrats have joined Feingold's call for censure, nearly all of them agree with Feingold's contention that the surveillance program is illegal. But the president's adversaries overlook the solid legal basis for the administration's actions outlined in Byron York's recent article on a little-known court decision in a matter called In re: Sealed Case. Here is York's story, from the February 27 issue of National Review.

In early September 2002, just before the first anniversary of the September 11 terrorist attacks, a group of lawyers gathered in a heavily protected, windowless room in the Department of Justice building in Washington. There were three federal appeals-court judges, Laurence Silberman, Edward Leavy, and Ralph Guy. There was Theodore Olson, the U.S. solicitor general. There was Larry Thompson, the deputy attorney general. And there was John Yoo, the Justice official who had closely studied questions of war powers and presidential authority. Rounding out the group were a few other department staffers, one official from the FBI, and David Addington, Vice President Cheney's top lawyer.

The purpose of the meeting was to argue a case whose details remain so classified that they are known by only a few people, but whose outcome, a decision known as In re: Sealed Case, has become one of the key documents in the hottest argument in Washington today: the fight over what President Bush calls the "terrorist surveillance" of persons with known al-Qaeda connections, and what the president's opponents call "domestic spying."

The three judges made up what is known as the FISA Court of Review. It was created in 1978 by the now-famous Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. The act required that the president go to the so-called FISA Court to seek a warrant for surveillance in top-secret foreign-intelligence cases. For any disputed decisions that might arise, Congress also created the Court of Review, a sort of super-secret appeals court.

But in all the years between 1978 and 2002, there had never been occasion for the Court of Review to actually meet. Not until Sealed Case, and the three-way collision between the executive, legislative, and judicial branches that it involved. Today, a look at the circumstances of the case provides not only an insight into the administration's rationale for the secret, warrantless surveillance program but also important clues to the mystery of how the whole thing got started in the first place.

The conflict began with the passage of the Patriot Act in October 2001. The act tore down the "wall" that had arisen in the Justice Department that blocked intelligence officials and criminal investigators from working together and sharing information. That wall had been cemented by a set of internal department guidelines written in 1995, in which then–attorney general Janet Reno outlined the department's constricted surveillance procedures.

The Patriot Act was designed to fix that problem. But a month after the act was passed, when the Justice Department submitted surveillance requests to the FISA Court under the new, looser standards passed by Congress, the FISA Court in effect rejected the Patriot Act, and instead reaffirmed the old 1995 Clinton-era standard.

A standoff ensued. In early 2002, the Justice Department adopted new surveillance procedures based on the Patriot Act. In March 2002, the department informed the FISA Court that it would use those new standards in surveillance applications. In May, the FISA Court said, in effect, not so fast, and ordered modifications in the procedures. Among other things, the FISA Court ordered that "law enforcement officials shall not make recommendations to intelligence officials concerning the initiation, operation, continuation or expansion of FISA searches or surveillances" — a reasonable facsimile of the old wall. The FISA Court also ordered that the Justice Department include certain staffers in all surveillance debates, an order that quickly became known in the Justice Department as the "chaperone requirement."

The Justice Department resisted, and in July 2002 filed a surveillance application — the details are still a secret — using its new procedures, without the FISA Court's mandated changes. The Court approved the application but insisted that the modifications be made according to the court's dictates. And then, in August, the FISA Court took the extraordinary step of making its decision public, accusing the Justice Department of habitually misrepresenting evidence and misleading the court. That's when the department decided to take the matter to the Court of Review, leading to the September 2002 session in that secure room in department headquarters.

"We're here today," Theodore Olson said as the secret In re: Sealed Case court argument began, "because the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court's May 17th order . . . has perpetuated a serious and increasingly destructive barrier which has hamstrung the president and his subordinates" in their work to protect "the United States and its citizens from attack and from international terrorism." The FISA Court's ruling, Olson continued, was "inexplicable."

Olson and the judges went back and forth over the history of the wall. Nobody really knew how it first came into being; the judges later said its origin was "shrouded in historical mist." They went over what Congress intended when it passed the Patriot Act. And they went over the question of whether the FISA Court had the power to tell the president how to conduct investigations.

The answer was no, Olson said. "To the extent that the FISA Court is purporting to reorganize the executive branch, the so-called chaperone function, I don't think Congress could constitutionally tell the executive or the attorney general that he could not talk to this subordinate without involving that subordinate," Olson told the judges, "and I certainly don't think the court can do so."

The entire session lasted just a few hours, and the Justice Department waited for the Court of Review's ruling. When it came, in November 2002, it was a slam-dunk win for the government.

In its opinion, the Court of Review said the FISA Court had, in effect, attempted to unilaterally impose the old 1995 rules. "In doing so, the FISA Court erred," the ruling read. "It did not provide any constitutional basis for its action — we think there is none — and misconstrued the main statutory provision on which it relied." The FISA Court, according to the ruling, "refus[ed] to consider the legal significance of the Patriot Act's crucial amendments" and "may well have exceeded the constitutional bounds" governing the courts by asserting "authority to govern the internal organization and investigative procedures of the Department of Justice."

And then the Court of Review did one more thing, something that has repercussions in today's surveillance controversy. Not only could the FISA Court not tell the president how to do his work, the Court of Review said, but the president also had the "inherent authority" under the Constitution to conduct needed surveillance without obtaining any warrant — from the FISA Court or anyone else. Referring to an earlier case, known as Truong, which dealt with surveillance before FISA was passed, the Court of Review wrote:
    "The Truong court, as did all the other courts to have 
decided the issue, held that the President did have
inherent authority to conduct warrantless searches to
obtain foreign intelligence information. . . . We take
for granted that the President does have that authority
and, assuming that is so, FISA could not encroach on the
President's constitutional power."
It was a clear and sweeping statement of executive authority. And what was most likely not known to the Court of Review at the time was that the administration had, in 2002, started a program in which it did exactly what the Court of Review said it had the power to do: order the surveillance of some international communications without a warrant.

Read today, In re: Sealed Case does more than simply outline the president's authority. It also puts the administration's warrantless-surveillance decision in some context. What was going on at the time the president made the decision to go ahead with the surveillance? Well, first Congress passed the Patriot Act, giving the administration new powers. Then the FISA Court refused to recognize those powers and attempted to impose outdated restrictions on the administration. Then the White House, faced with the FISA Court's opposition — and with what administration officials believed were some inherent weaknesses in the FISA law — began to bypass the FISA Court in some cases. And then, in In re: Sealed Case, the administration received irrefutable legal support for its actions.

After the decision was handed down, the American Civil Liberties Union, which had submitted a brief in support of the FISA Court's actions restricting the administration, asked the Supreme Court to review In re: Sealed Case. The justices declined to take any action. That is not the same as the Court's upholding the ruling, but it does mean that the justices looked at the decision and chose not to intervene.

Today, the opinion stands as a bedrock statement of presidential power. And ironically, it came from a case that was not about whether the president had overstepped his bounds, but about whether the courts had overstepped their bounds. The Court of Review ruled strongly in favor of the president, and the Supreme Court declined to reconsider that decision. Reading the opinion, it's no wonder that George W. Bush has so strongly defended the surveillance program. If the FISA Court of Review is right, he has the Constitution on his side.

— Byron York, NR's White House correspondent, is the author of The Vast Left Wing Conspiracy: The Untold Story of How Democratic Operatives, Eccentric Billionaires, Liberal Activists, and Assorted Celebrities Tried to Bring Down a President — and Why They'll Try Even Harder Next Time.

nationalreview.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/17/2006 4:49:20 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
    Feingold's move, the Democrats' conspicuous exodus from 
it, and Feingold's bitter reaction to their fecklessness,
illustrate the tangled web the Democrats have weaved for
themselves concerning the premiere issue of the day:
.... the War on Terror.

Feingold's Transparent Feint to the Base

Posted by David Limbaugh

Doesn't it strike you as ironic that one of the major architects of a legislative scheme that tramples all over the First Amendment had the gall to try to censure President Bush for the wireless surveillance of terrorists?

At least with the Clinton impeachment, which many wanted to dilute to a censure and others to a mere verbal wrist-slap, there was no question that he committed multiple felonies. But now Sen. Russ Feingold demands that Bush be censured over a matter on which, to quote Al Gore, "there is no controlling legal authority," and which many believe is legal, proper, and, most importantly: imperative for our national security? And in case you missed it, Feingold said that the NSA surveillance program is precisely the type of activity the Framers had in mind in contemplating "high crimes and misdemeanors." Right, Russ.

Feingold's reckless ploy brings to mind the similarly frivolous stunt by Vietnam veteran John Kerry to phone in a filibuster on Judge Samuel Alito from a five-star ski resort in the Swiss Alps.

Both men's gratuitous schemes were absurd on their face and guaranteed to fail. They didn't even garner support among a significant number of their fellow Democrats in the Senate. But what they did have in common was their perverse appeal to the Democrats' mouth-frothing base, which is a condition precedent to securing the Democratic presidential nomination.

Overall, we must conclude that Feingold's gambit was even more ill-conceived than Kerry's. While Kerry's filibuster was marginally about Alito's alleged future enabling of President Bush's NSA surveillance program, it was far more about his suspected stance on abortion precedent. But Feingold's censure was only about the NSA program, and no matter how vociferously the antiwar left calls for Bush's head, the stubborn fact is that the public supports the program.

Feingold's move, the Democrats' conspicuous exodus from it, and Feingold's bitter reaction to their fecklessness, illustrate the tangled web the Democrats have weaved for themselves concerning the premiere issue of the day (and tomorrow): the War on Terror.

Feingold didn't mince words in accusing his party of "cowering," when they not only wouldn't support his measure, but frantically avoided press questions about their refusal.

On that point, Feingold is correct. Democrat leaders often fold when challenged to demonstrate the courage of their so-called convictions, especially where national security is concerned. They are all over the map, or at least back and forth from east to west, because their positions aren't based on deep-held convictions, but political calculations, which are a moving target.

We saw the exact same thing when Democrat after Democrat praised Congressman John Murtha for "boldly" calling for a precipitous withdrawal of our troops from Iraq. Yet when the rubber hit the road, they ran like a stampede of elephants to avoid putting themselves on record as supporting withdrawal.

When it comes to national security, the Democrats want it both ways. They insist they support the troops while denigrating most everything they do, from alleged torture and abuse, to not finding Osama, not training Iraqi soldiers quickly enough, terrorizing Iraqi citizens and killing innocents. They say they want to intercept phone calls from Al Qaeda, yet do everything they can to make it more difficult. They politically exploit the issue, fraudulently mischaracterize the program as "domestic" spying, imply innocent grandmas are likely victims, and demand we hamstring authorities by requiring warrants when it wouldn't be practical.

They wag their fingers about racial profiling at airports -- preferring the wanding of those same grandmas they're trying to protect from the evil NSA -- then go ape over the ports transfer to the Arab Dubai Ports World. And on the latest Bush-is-evil craze, concerning the president's speech on preemption, let's not forget that John Kerry himself grudgingly conceded to ABC's George Stephanopoulos that he was not necessarily opposed to pre-emption, just that the president had invoked it "unwisely." This was, of course, after Kerry had opposed it, and before, no doubt, he decides to oppose it again in time to pile on President Bush for his latest iteration of the doctrine in partial reference to the Iran nuclear threat.

My head spins as I think about this stuff. Can you imagine the spectacle of the Democratic presidential primaries, with each of the vying candidates trying to out-crazy the other to appeal to the deranged base while straining to retain a sufficient appearance of sanity to remain viable for the general election? Let them bask in news of President Bush's low approval ratings now, but entertaining times from the other side are just over the horizon.

davidlimbaugh.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/22/2006 3:20:06 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
CENSURE POLITICS

Byron York
The Corner

The Republican National Committee has just released a new ad, entitled "Censure":

<<< September eleventh changed our country.

And it changed how America responds to terrorists.

President Bush is working to keep American families safe.

Passing the PATRIOT Act which has disrupted over one hundred and fifty terrorist threats and cells making sure the US is monitoring terrorist communications.

But some Democrats are working against these efforts to secure our country, opposing the PATRIOT Act and terrorist surveillance program.

Their leader is Russ Feingold.

Now Feingold and other Democrats want to censure the President.

Publicly reprimanding President Bush for pursuing suspected members of al Qaeda.

Some Democrats are even calling for President Bush’s impeachment.

Is this how Democrats plan to win the War on Terror?

Call Russ Feingold and ask him why he’s more interested in censuring the President than protecting our freedom.

Paid for by the Republican National Committee not authorized by any candidate or candidate’s committee. >>>

corner.nationalreview.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/22/2006 5:09:53 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
A MOVEMENT TO CENSURE JIMMY CARTER. Well, it's no dumber than Russ Feingold's.

Instapundit

instapundit.com

censurecarter.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/22/2006 6:19:53 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Feingold for Wiretapping, but Just Not When the President Does It

by Amanda B. Carpenter
HUMAN EVENTS
Posted Mar 21, 2006

John Kerry, the 2004 Presidential nominee and ultimate flip-flopper must have started a trend. In fact, it's not a trend, it's the single-most used strategy of the Democratic Party.

And now potential 2008 Presidential candidate Russ Feingold is testing it out.

In a report from the Associated Press Feingold, the lone Democrat that is calling for censure of President Bush for his domestic wiretapping program, said he supports wiretapping terrorists.

The AP reported that Feingold said,


<<< "If you were on the phone with an al-Qaida person, I support your being wiretapped, all the time, for a long time." >>>


Except when the President doesn't get his permission slip signed from Congress.


<<< ''We cannot allow the president of the United States to break the law,'' he said. ''Censure is a quick way to solve the problem. Pass a resolution. It's over." >>>


For Feingold and the rest of the Party it would be over, but with the added benefit of the taking the President out to the proverbial woodshed to spank him in front of the media for some applause from their disgruntled base.

But since when do we start punishing people for doing things we agree with?


Miss Carpenter is Assistant Editor for HUMAN EVENTS.

humaneventsonline.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/28/2006 12:51:27 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Now We Know

Feingold’s got it all backward.

By Mark Goldblatt
National Review Online

Wisconsin Senator Russell Feingold has introduced a resolution to censure President Bush for violating the provisions of the Foreign Intelligence Security Act by authorizing warrantless eavesdropping on calls from suspected terrorists outside the United States to persons inside the country. The 1978 law requires a warrant from a special FISA court in order to do domestic wiretapping. To date, Tom Harkin of Iowa and Barbara Boxer of California are the only Democratic senators to embrace Feingold’s effort. But others, including Ted Kennedy, have not ruled out supporting such a bill if it comes to a Senate vote.

Whether a president, during wartime, has the right to sidestep the FISA requirement is a knotty constitutional question. (Abraham Lincoln, remember, utilized his war powers to suspend habeas corpus during the Civil War.) The more basic question, however, is why Bush thought it necessary since FISA judges supposedly rubber stamp all such warrant requests.

The sentencing phase of the trial of convicted terrorist Zacarias Moussaoui has provided a partial answer to that question. It turns out Harry Samit, the FBI field agent who arrested Moussaoui for immigration violations prior to the 9/11 attacks, sensed that Moussaoui was up to no good, even suspected he was involved in a plot to hijack airliners, and begged his supervisor to dig deeper into his activities and computer files. The supervisor refused, according to Samit, because FISA warrants had proven problematic for the Bureau in the past. Since, technically, Moussaoui’s immigration violations amounted to criminal wrongdoing, not terrorist subterfuge, requesting a foreign intelligence court warrant in this case was “just the kind of thing that would get FBI agents in trouble,” Samit alleges the supervisor told him.

In other words, the FISA court was not a rubber-stamp operation. If FISA judges sensed a blurring of the hard line between criminal and intelligence investigations, they might say no — and might thereafter look unkindly on whoever had made the request. That reality, apparently, had a chilling affect on the FBI’s efforts to get to the bottom of Moussaoui’s involvement in the conspiracy which brought down the Twin Towers and killed almost 3000 Americans.

Any wonder, then, that Bush authorized wiretapping without FISA warrants — and informed Congress he was doing so? Under the circumstances, if he’d failed to do so, that might have been grounds for censure.

Are you listening, Senator Feingold?

— Mark Goldblatt is author of Africa Speaks, a satire of black urban culture.

nationalreview.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)3/31/2006 1:57:40 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35834
 
The Censure Farce Continues

Posted by John
Power Line

The Associated Press reported today that Russ Feingold has invited John Dean, former White House counsel who was imprisoned and disbarred following Watergate (great witness!), to testify at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in favor of censuring President Bush for using electronic surveillance of international communications to catch terrorists:

<<< Dean, a one-time White House counsel under President Nixon, testified before the Senate committee investigating the events that eventually led to Nixon's impeachment.

He recently wrote a column comparing Bush's conduct to Nixon's, saying both authorized warrantless wiretapping and broke the law. >>>


That's Dean's opinion, and I suppose he's entitled to it. But when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Nixon's surveillance in internal security cases was illegal in United States v. United States District Court, 407 U.S. 297 (1972), it specifically distinguished between the case before it and surviellance involving foreign intelligence. The Court said that its holding did not apply to surveillance for purposes of foreign intelligence gathering, as is involved in the NSA program:

    [T]he instant case requires no judgment on the scope of 
the President's surveillance power with respect to the
activities of foreign powers, within or without this
country.
And again:
    We emphasize, before concluding this opinion, the scope 
of our decision. As stated at the outset, this case
involves only the domestic aspects of national security.
We have not addressed, and express no opinion as to, the
issues which may be involved with respect to activities
of foreign powers or their agents.
With all due respect to Mr. Dean, I don't think the President was required to consult him before acting to protect the American people from terrorists. I think the President was entitled to rely on the six federal appellate court opinions that have held that the President has the constitutional authority to carry out warrantless electronic surveillance for foreign intelligence gathering purposes.

powerlineblog.com

duluthsuperior.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)4/3/2006 6:34:14 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Hey buddy can you spare a photo?

Posted by Paul
Power Line

Senator Leahy has expressed his inclination to support Senator Feingold's move to censure President Bush over the NSA intercept program. Leahy must have been absent from law school the day they taught law. President Bush's decision is supported by all (of the admittedly small number of) court decisions on the issue. Leahy did not explain how, under these circumstances, censure could possibly be justified. Instead, he proclaimed that his personal view that the program is illegal "will be history's verdict." Now there's an argument stopper.

In addition to "history," Leahy relied on the verdict of felon John Dean. But, as the Washington Times reports, Senator Hatch resurrected an article Dean wrote five days after the September 11 attacks in which he argued that "the president does not need congressional authority to respond." The Constitution, Dean argued in a FindLaw article, "does not put the Congress in charge of counterterrorism, which is an executive function." Dean always did have trouble keeping his story straight.

Senator Cornyn suggested that Dean's testimony might be part of an effort to sell a book Dean has coming out. Dean did not discredit this view when (again according to the Times) he pulled aside two photographers who were snapping pictures of him and told them he needed a picture of himself for his forthcoming book's dust jacket.

powerlineblog.com



To: Sully- who wrote (18644)4/3/2006 7:32:35 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Senator Feingold's Profiles In Courage

Posted by David Limbaugh

I watched with disgust Chris Wallace's excellent interview of Sen. Russ Feingold on "Fox News Sunday," where Feingold indignantly defended his quixotic, yet still outrageous, motion to censure President Bush for his NSA surveillance program.

Feingold says that the president should be censured (perhaps even impeached) for violating the law. Why, it's worse than Watergate, says Feingold, because the president is thumbing his nose at the laws of this country.

This is the same senator who wasn't convinced Clinton had obstructed justice or committed perjury beyond a reasonable doubt. If Clinton wasn't thumbing his nose at the laws of this country, how would you describe what he was doing?

Feingold is also incensed that President Bush has a "preemptive doctrine of war." But did he have the courage to challenge Sen. Kerry when Kerry admitted during the presidential campaign that "American presidents have always had a right of preemption to address immediate threats"?

Feingold's move is not one of moral courage, but raw political ambition. In the words of Democratic senator Mark Dayton, Feingold's move is "an overreaching step by someone who is grandstanding and running for president at the expense of his own party and his own country."

But Feingold's motion is also born of frustration at being on the losing end of a power struggle. While he made the obligatory noises about President Bush's "imperial presidency," he betrayed the real source of his angst when he said, "we have this problem of one-party rule in our system of government right now," and "we have a Republican president and two houses of Congress run by the Republicans" Sorry, Senator, but they were elected, and it's not your call. Learn to be a better loser.

Feingold told Wallace that Bush should not be creating a "very divisive situation in our country that weakens us in the fight against terrorism internationally." What? Does Feingold think his bogus stunt to censure and humiliate the commander in chief during wartime is not divisive and will not weaken us? To advocate such a measure, Feingold must be pretty certain Bush broke the law, right? Well, a group of retired FISA judges don't agree with him. Nor, obviously, did many of Bush's predecessors who engaged in similar conduct. Has Feingold ever accused any of them of acting like King George III?

If Feingold is so sure Bush broke the law, why did he admit to Chris Wallace that "one of the reasons I decided it was time for the censure resolution [is] because it became clear that there was not going to be the kind of investigation that had to happen to find out exactly what this program is all about"? In other words, he wants to invoke this draconian remedy for the backdoor purpose of finding out what the program entailed.

That's like charging a person with a crime without sufficient evidence he committed it so you can begin a fishing expedition -- under color of law and at government expense. This is precisely the type of abuse of process for which Feingold wants to censure President Bush.

Since Feingold called those who wouldn't join his censure move "cowards," one might assume he is a man of moral courage. But were you aware that Feingold once said, "Iraq presents a genuine threat, especially in the form of weapons of mass destruction, chemical, biological, and potentially nuclear weapons. I agree that Saddam Hussein is exceptionally dangerous"? But has Feingold ever displayed the "courage" to condemn those who persistently accuse Bush of lying about WMD?

Even more to the point, have you ever read the exchange between Feingold and Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pa., on Sept. 26, 1996, concerning proposed legislation to ban partial-birth abortion? Now there's a profile in courage.

Essentially, Feingold refused to agree that if a baby's head emerges from the birth canal accidentally, the law should prevent the doctor from killing it. Demonstrating greater cowardice than could even be imagined by those he accused of cowardice, he said, "I am not the person to be answering that question. That is a question that should be answered by a doctor, and by the woman who received advice from the doctor."

So, he's willing to grant to doctors and mothers the prerogative to murder already-born human beings, and he says he's worried about President Bush having too much power?

Sen. Feingold, perhaps because of his deathly fear of defying the pro-abortion lobby, lacked the moral courage to exercise his constitutional duty to preempt a doctor and mother from "choosing" to kill an already-born baby. Instead, he hid behind the perniciously euphemistic ruse that this was a matter concerning the mother's health that she and her doctor had to decide.

Shame on the lecturing senator.
davidlimbaugh.com