[Mb-civic] Gore Says Bush Broke the Law With Spying - Washington
Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Tue Jan 17 03:57:33 PST 2006
Gore Says Bush Broke the Law With Spying
Warrantless Surveillance an Example of 'Indifference' to Constitution,
He Charges
By Chris Cillizza
Special to The Washington Post
Tuesday, January 17, 2006; A03
Former vice president Al Gore accused President Bush of breaking the law
by authorizing wiretaps on U.S. citizens without court warrants and
called on Congress yesterday to reassert its oversight responsibilities
on a "shameful exercise of power" by the White House.
"The president of the United States has been breaking the law repeatedly
and insistently," Gore said in a speech at Constitution Hall in
Washington. "A president who breaks the law is a threat to the very
structure of our government."
To restore a system of checks and balances to government, Gore proposed
appointing a special counsel to look into the domestic surveillance
program, developing new whistle-blower protections and not extending the
Patriot Act. He urged members of Congress, only one of whom -- Sen.
Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) -- was present, to "start acting like the
independent and coequal branch of government you're supposed to be."
On the holiday marking the 77th birthday of the Rev. Martin Luther King
Jr., Gore drew a parallel between the FBI's eavesdropping on the civil
rights leader and the current eavesdropping by the National Security
Agency on communications between Americans and what Bush has said are
suspected terrorists.
He also sought to cast the domestic surveillance program as simply the
latest extension of a "truly breathtaking expansion of executive power"
by the Bush administration. Gore said this began when the White House
used incorrect intelligence about whether Iraq possessed weapons of mass
destruction to justify invading it and has continued through the Abu
Ghraib prisoner-abuse scandal and the debate over whether torture may be
used to extract information from detainees.
"The disrespect embodied in these apparent mass violations of the law is
part of a larger pattern of seeming indifference to the Constitution
that is deeply troubling to Americans in both political parties," Gore
said. The Bush administration's actions have "brought our republic to
the brink of a dangerous breach in the fabric of the Constitution," he
added.
While Gore's denunciation of the administration's domestic surveillance
program drew cheers from the crowd at the event, sponsored by the
Liberty Coalition and the American Constitution Society, national public
polling shows that Americans remain divided on the issue.
In the latest Washington Post-ABC News poll, 51 percent said that
"wiretapping of telephone calls and e-mails without court approval" was
an acceptable tool for the federal government to use when investigating
terrorism. Forty-seven percent said it was an unacceptable for the
government to use those methods in order to catch suspected terrorists.
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) has called
Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales to testify at a hearing about the
eavesdropping program. Specter said Sunday that if Bush broke the law in
authorizing wiretaps without going through the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act court to get warrants, he could face impeachment.
"I'm not suggesting remotely that there's any basis" for impeachment,
Specter told George Stephanopoulos on ABC's "This Week." "After
impeachment, you could have a criminal prosecution, but the principal
remedy, George, under our society is to pay a political price."
Gonzales, appearing on Fox News Channel's "Hannity & Colmes" last night,
said, "The Department of Justice has carefully reviewed this program
from its inception, and a determination has been made that the program
is lawful." He added that the president not only has the authority, "he
has the duty" to protect the United States against another attack.
Tracey Schmitt, a spokeswoman for the Republican National Committee,
dismissed Gore's speech as headline-hunting. "Al Gore's incessant need
to insert himself in the headline of the day is almost as glaring as his
lack of understanding of the threats facing America," Schmitt said.
Gore was supposed to have been introduced, using a video link, by former
congressman Robert L. Barr Jr. (R-Ga.) -- a bitter adversary of Gore and
President Bill Clinton during the 1990s who now shares Gore's concern
over the surveillance program. That strange-bedfellows moment was
thwarted by a technological breakdown.
Although Gore devoted the vast majority of his speech to the controversy
over domestic spying, he did make time to advocate several policy
initiatives he has championed, most notably on global warming and the
corrosive influence of television on political discourse. He steered
away from any discussion of his future national ambitions, offering only
a wry smile in response to a "Gore '08" shout from a man in the crowd.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/16/AR2006011600526.html?nav=hcmodule
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