SENATORS OBJECT TO WIRETAPPING DEAL WITH WHITE HOUSE
Senators Feingold, Durbin, and Salazar Say Specter Bill Goes Too
Far
September 25, 2006
Washington D.C. – Following the announcement from three Republican
Senators today of an agreement they reached with the administration
on wiretapping provisions of Senator Specter’s NSA bill, Senators
Russ Feingold (D-WI), Richard Durbin (D-IL) and Ken Salazar (D-CO) released
the following statement:
“Democrats support wiretapping terrorists, and common sense reforms
to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) deserve consideration.
But Senator Specter’s bill simply goes too far -- it attempts
to legalize the President’s illegal warrantless wiretapping program,
guts the FISA statute and abdicates Congress’s role as a check
on the Executive branch.
Sadly, today's so-called compromise does not change any of these troublesome
excesses.
Despite claims to the contrary, the bill would still allow warrantless
spying on Americans on American soil by authorizing so-called “program”
warrants and making review by the FISA court optional. And while language
was deleted regarding the President's authority as Commander in Chief,
the bill would still delete the provision of FISA that makes it the
“exclusive means” for wiretapping. Ultimately, the legislation
would still ratify an unlawful surveillance program.
While we appreciate our colleagues’ efforts, we still have grave
concerns about the bill. Fighting terrorism effectively and protecting
the privacy of innocent Americans are too important to be debated during
a brief floor period before an election.”
Read a fact sheet on
how Senator Specter's bill is still a failure.
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