Despite insisting earlier that a short-term extension of the Patriot Act would not be acceptable, Bush seemed to indicate in a late-night statement that he would sign it.
"The work of Congress on the Patriot Act is not finished," Bush said. "The act will expire next summer, but the terrorist threat to America will not expire on that schedule. I look forward to continuing to work with Congress to reauthorize the Patriot Act."
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., said he had no choice but to accept a six-month extension in the face of a successful filibuster and the Patriot Act's Dec. 31 expiration date. "I'm not going to let the Patriot Act die," Frist said.
Why do they let this person who has no regard for the law or the rights of others continue to get a 6 month extension on a law that violates the civil rights of others? Considering the recent disclosure of Bush's illegal spying on American citizens without obtaining permission from the court he should not be given in to.On December 20, 2005 Rep. Slaughter wrote the following letter, demanding Bush spy hearings in the house. Sign the petition and urge for hearings for this domestic spying. This is not something we can let go unchallenged.
Last week, we learned from the New York Times that President George W. Bush signed a presidential order in 2002 allowing the National Security Agency to spy on US citizens without court-approved warrants.Our law forbids warrantless surveillance of American citizens, and it provides the Government with a set of procedures to follow in emergency situations, when federal agents do not have enough time to get a warrant. So, if the Times report is correct, the Bush government may have acted illegally by not following these procedures.
Moreover,this report raises serious constitutional questions as to whether the President's order violated the Fourth Amendment and the requirement that the President "shall take Care that Laws be faithfully executed." (Article II, sec. 3)Congress has the responsibility to call out the Administration, dig up more facts from this story, and determine whether the Bush Administration did in fact take actions which violated the constitutional and legal parameters for the Executive Branch. My colleagues in the House of Representatives must do their part in holding this Administration accountable if in fact it acted with total disregard of our laws. So, please join me today, and urge Congressman James Sensenbrenner Jr., Chairman of the House Judiciary Comittee, and Congressman Peter Hoekstra, Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, to hold hearings demanding answers on Bush's domestic spying.
This is not a partisan issue. Already, my congressional colleague Senator Arlen Specter (R-PA), Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, has expressed his concern about this eavesdropping program as being "inappropriate." Senator Specter has already indicated that there will be hearings in the Senate early next year and that they will have "a very, very high priority." The House must take the same actions and conducts its own investigations. So, please sign my petition and urge Reps. Sensenbrenner and Hoekstra to hold a hearing on these allegations as soon as Congress reconvenes early next year.
The constitutional and legal questions by this secret domestic spying strike at the very heart of the foundation of our democratic ideals. These stories of undisclosed domestic spying and wiretaps - approved by the White House and carried out by our top law enforcement agencies without Congressional knowledge or judicial review - force citizens here and abroad to question our nation's commitment to its own ideals. Unfortunately, we are all too numb to an Administration -- which has already sullied our reputation abroad as the torch bearer of democracy, and a free, open, and tolerant nation -- by authorizing secret prisons, planting propaganda, and fighting attempts to ban torture. However, this doesn't mean we stay quiet.
We must act today and use our collective outrage to demand answers. I want to collect thousands of your signatures and deliver them personally to Chairmen Sensenbrenner and Hoekstra after the New Year. So, please sign my petition sign my petition today.
Thank you again for all you do to restore faith in our democracy.
In Solidarity,
Congresswoman
Louise M. Slaughter
UPDATE****************** WASHINGTON - Congress on Thursday approved a one-month extension of the Patriot Act and sent it to President Bush in a pre-Christmas scramble to prevent many of its anti-terrorism provisions from expiring Dec. 31. The Senate, with only Sen. John Warner, R-Va., present approved the Feb. 3 expiration date four hours after an almost empty House chamber agreed to Rep. James Sensenbrenner's refusal to agree to a six-month extension. Congress can pass legislation with only a few lawmakers present as long as no member of the House or Senate objects. The Senate session lasted four minutes. Sensenbrenner, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, said the shorter extension would force swifter Senate action and had the support of the White House and Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill. The Senate reconvenes Jan. 18 and the House Jan. 26. "A six-month extension, in my opinion, would have simply allowed the Senate to duck the issue until the last week in June," the Wisconson Republican told reporters. Senate Democrats and a few Republicans united against a House-Senate compromise that would have renewed several expiring provisions permanently while extending some other for another four years. "The amount of time is less important than the good-faith effort that will be needed in improving the Patriot Act to strike the right balance in respecting Americans liberty and privacy, while protecting their security," said Sen. Patrick Leahy (news, bio, voting record), D-Vt., the ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee. "We're happy to agree to a shorter-term extension of the Patriot Act," said Rebecca Kirszner, an aide to Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. "The important thing is to strike the right balance between liberty and security." If the Congress had not acted several provisions enacted in the days following the 2001 terror attacks would have expired. Bush has repeatedly urged Congress not to let that happen. The Senate had previously voted on Wednesday to extend the provisions by six months, previously GOP leaders had stated that they would only accept a permanent renewal of the law. The House approved the measure earlier this month, but a Democratic-led filibuster blocked passage in the Senate. Critics argued that the bill would limit the civil liberties of innocent Americans. "No one should make the mistake of thinking that a shorter extension will make it possible to jam the unacceptable conference report through the Congress," said Sen. Russell Feingold, D-Wis., who led the Senate filibuster. "That bill is dead and cannot be revived." "It appears to me that Congress understands we've got to keep the Patriot Act in place, that we're still under threat," Bush said before boarding a helicopter for a trip to the presidential retreat at Camp David, Md. Most of the Patriot Act,expanded the government's surveillance and prosecutorial powers against suspected terrorists was made permanent when Congress passed it after the Sept. 11 attacks on New York City and Washington. Making permanent the rest of the Patriot Act would allow investigators to tap any telephone or computer that they think a terrorist might use. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., said he had no choice but to accept a six-month extension in the face of a successful filibuster and the Patriot Act's Dec. 31 expiration date. "I'm not going to let the Patriot Act die," Frist said. Bush indicated that he would sign the extension. "The work of Congress on the Patriot Act is not finished," Bush said. "The act will expire next summer, but the terrorist threat to America will not expire on that schedule. I look forward to continuing to work with Congress to reauthorize the Patriot Act." Some Republicans shared Sensenbrenner's dislike for the six-month extension. "We'll be right back where we are right now," said a clearly frustrated Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah.
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