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Senate Showdown Tuesday on Domestic Spying

March 6, 2006

Tomorrow is shaping as "Showdown Tuesday" for the Senate Intelligence Committee. On Tuesday, the Intelligence Committee led by Kansas Senator Pat Roberts will decide whether to investigate President Bush's illegal NSA domestic wiretapping. At this point, the vote could go either way.
Whether Roberts' committee once again abdicates its oversight role likely comes to down the votes of three Republican members previously critical of the NSA program: Mike DeWine of Ohio, Maine's Olympia Snowe and Chuck Hagel of Nebraska. DeWine, who has both advocated legislation retroactively authorizing the program and sought to avoid a discussion of its constitutionality, will almost assuredly vote against an investigation. The full pressure of Karl Rove and the Bush White House will be focused on Snowe, who previously called for a joint inquiry by the Judiciary and Intelligence committees and Hagel, who on January 29th declared of the President:

"He [Bush] just can't unilaterally decide that that 1978 law is out of date and he will be the guardian of America and he will violate that law."

There should be no doubt where Chairman Pat Roberts and Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist stand on the issue. Roberts, who continues to stonewall the promised "Phase II" Intel Committee investigation into the misuses of pre-Iraq war intelligence, authored a letter on February 3rd staunchly supporting the dubious White House legal justification for the program. And just this past Friday, Frist fired a shot across the Democrats' bow, threatening to curb the committee's charter should it proceed with an inquiry into Bush's domestic spying. Far from playing the role of "peacemakers" as described by Byron Wolf of ABC News, Frist and Roberts are trying to stop any oversight of the Bush White House dead in its tracks.
Tuesday's showdown was already delayed once, as a scheduled February 16th vote was pushed back to allow the Bush administration more time to twist arms and perhaps crack some heads. Tomorrow, we'll find out if it worked.
(For the latest news, legal documents, key statutes, timelines and other essential materials, see the Perrspectives NSA Scandal Resource Center.)

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Jon Perr
Jon Perr is a technology marketing consultant and product strategist who writes about American politics and public policy.

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