Statement of Senator Russ Feingold
On the Need to Hold the President Accountable for the Illegal
Domestic Surveillance Program
March 16, 2006
As Congress heads into a weeklong recess, I hope members of the Senate
have a chance to listen to their constituents back home. All Americans
want to fight terrorism and protect our country from those who wish
to do us harm, but they don’t want to sacrifice the rights and
principles our country was founded upon. One of those fundamental American
principles is that the President doesn’t get to pick and choose
which laws he follows.
There has been a lot of talk in recent weeks, and especially this week,
about Congress changing the law to authorize the President’s otherwise
illegal domestic surveillance program. Of course, anyone who makes that
argument concedes that the program is illegal. In addition, the President
has yet to explain convincingly why he can’t follow the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, which allows wiretapping of
terrorists while protecting law-abiding Americans.
The President has broken the law, and the censure resolution I introduced
on Monday is intended to hold him accountable. While there have been
plenty of personal attacks directed at me this week, few have argued
the merits. The facts for censure are clear. FISA makes it a crime to
wiretap American citizens on American soil without the requisite court
orders – which is exactly what the President has admitted doing.
Before the program was revealed, he misled the American people by assuring
them that he was getting warrants for wiretaps. Since it was revealed,
he has misled the American people about the legal basis for his actions.
I look forward to a full hearing, debate and vote in committee on this
important matter. If the Committee fails to consider the resolution
in a reasonable time period, I will ask that there be a vote in the
full Senate. I know Americans will have a lot to say when they see their
elected officials during the break. I hope my colleagues listen.
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