House Refuses to Curb Patriot Act
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, July 8, 2004
WASHINGTON The Republican-led House bowed to a White
House veto threat Thursday and stood by the USA Patriot Act,
defeating an effort to block the part of the anti-terrorism law
that helps the government investigate people's reading habits.
The effort to defy Bush and bridle the law's powers lost by
210-210, with a majority needed to prevail. The amendment appeared
on its way to victory as the roll call's normal 15-minute time
limit expired, but GOP leaders kept the vote open for about 20 more
minutes as they persuaded about 10 Republicans who initially
supported the provision to change their votes.
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"Shame, shame, shame," Democrats chanted as the minutes passed
and votes were switched. The tactic was reminiscent of last year's
House passage of the Medicare overhaul measure, when GOP leaders
held the vote open for an extra three hours until they got the
votes they needed.
The effort to curb the Patriot Act was pushed by a coalition of
Democrats and conservative Republicans. But they fell short in a
showdown that came just four months before an election in which the
conduct of the fight against terrorism will be on the political
agenda.
Besides successfully fending off the effort to weaken the law,
the veto threat underscored the administration's determination to
strike an aggressive stance on law enforcement and terrorism.
The House has voted before to block portions of the nearly
three-year-old law, but Congress has never succeeded in rolling
back any of it. Yet neither has Bush succeeded in his quest to
expand some of its powers.
Supporters of the law said the Patriot Act has been a valuable
tool in anti-terror efforts. The law, enacted in the weeks after
the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, gave the government stronger powers to
conduct investigations and detain people.
'Lives Have Been Saved'
"I would say, in my judgment, that lives have been saved,
terrorists have been disrupted, and our country is safer" because
of the act, said Rep. Porter Goss, R-Fla., chairman of the House
Intelligence Committee and a man President Bush is considering to
be the next director of the Central Intelligence Agency.
Rep. Bernard Sanders, I-Vt., and Rep. C.L. Butch Otter, R-Idaho,
led the effort to block one section of the law that lets
authorities get special court orders requiring book dealers,
libraries and others to surrender records such as purchases and
Internet sites visited on a library computer. They contended the
provision undermines civil liberties and threatens to let the
government snoop into the reading habits of innocent Americans.
'Two Prizes': Terrorists and Constitution
"We are all in that together," Sanders, one of Congress' most
liberal lawmakers, said of the anti-terror effort. "In the fight
against terrorism, we've got to keep our eyes on two prizes: the
terrorists and the United States Constitution."
The House voted last summer to block so-called "sneak and
peek" searches the law allows without the target's knowledge and
with warrants delivered afterward, but the provision never became
law. Otter, a conservative, abandoned a similar amendment Thursday
after it was ruled out of order for procedural reasons.
Thursday's showdown was over an amendment to a $39.8 billion
measure financing the Justice, Commerce and State departments for
next year. It came amid Bush administration warnings of an
increased risk of attacks as this summer and fall because
terrorists are hoping to disrupt this November's elections.
Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge said Thursday the
government is bolstering security in light of credible reports
about al-Qaida's plans. Officials familiar with briefings for
members of Congress this week said there is no evidence indicating
a specific time or place for an attack.
'Enough Funerals'
Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va., read a letter from the Justice
Department stating that "as recently as this past winter and
spring, a member of a terrorist group closely affiliated with
al-Qaida" had used Internet services at a public library. The
letter mentioned no specifics, Wolf said.
"If we can stop what took place in my area," said Wolf, whose
district is near the Pentagon, "then I want to stop that, because
we've gone to enough funerals."
Critics of the Patriot Act argued that without it, investigators
could still obtain book store and other records simply by obtaining
subpoenas or search warrants. Those traditional investigative tools
are harder to get from grand juries or courts than the orders
issued under the Patriot Act, which do not require authorities to
show probable cause.
No 'Tyranny'
"We don't want tyranny," said Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y.
Attorney General John Ashcroft said last September that the FBI
had never requested any records from libraries or businesses under
the Patriot Act.
But American Civil Liberties Union, which is suing the FBI
over its powers to demand information from Internet providers about
customers, says it believes the FBI might have used that authority
since Ashcroft made his remarks.
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