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Patriot Act Filibustered!
Only 52 of the necessary 60 Senators voted to invoke
cloture and cut off debate! 47 Senators voted with us. All Dems except
Tim Johnson and Ben Nelson. We picked up R's Craig, Sununu, Murkowski
and Hagel. This is a tremendous testament to your hard work over many
years on the Patriot Act, and especially to your hard work in the past
few months!
The debate continues. Some Senators are suggesting as an alternative
that the expiring provisions of the Patriot Act be extended for 3
months. Senator Frist has adamantly refused to allow the Senate to
consider this short term extension. He said that the House would not
take one up, and said the President would not sign such a short term
extension. He's threatening to either let the Patriot Act expire, or get
his way on the conference report.
It's brinksmanship. Senators will now search for some kind of an end
game.
Stay tuned.
Please thank your Senators who voted with us on this, they really need
our support now and must be encouraged to stay the course! Calls,
Letters to the Senators, or Letters to the Editor would all be
appropriate. This is a big victory and you all made it happen!
ACLU Praises Senate For Standing for Freedom,
Rejecting White House Pressure;
Calls Cloture Vote a
Victory for Civil Liberties
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, December 16, 2005
WASHINGTON - The American Civil Liberties Union today applauded the
Senate for rejecting a cloture motion to limit debate on legislation to
reauthorize the Patriot Act that failed to make substantive changes to
that law. The vote came despite increasing pressure from the White House
and its allies to adopt the flawed bill. The failure to invoke cloture
means efforts to fix the Patriot Act can continue.
Today, fair-minded Senators stood firm in their commitment to the
Constitution and rejected the White House~s call to pass a faulty law,
said Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU Washington Legislative
Office.
The Senate was our last, best hope to preserve our fundamental freedoms,
and it did not fail. The Senators who voted to continue debate saw
through the empty rhetoric and dismissed the notion that this damaged
bill was in the best interests of the country. This was a victory for
the privacy and liberty of all Americans.~ The ACLU noted that Senators
from both parties vowed to continue to press for reforms and stood up
for the protection of the fundamental freedoms of all Americans. 47
Senators voted against cloture, and both Democrats and Republicans spoke
passionately about the need to protect ordinary Americans from
government misuse of these broad powers governed by the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). Many pointed to evidence that the
secret records search powers expanded by the Patriot Act are being used
with increasing frequency to gather the financial and Internet
transaction records of innocent Americans.
The motion for cloture failed only hours after the New York Times
revealed that the White House had directed the National Security Agency
(NSA) to spy on people in the United States in violation of the FISA
law. Congress passed the FISA rules in response to revelations during
the Nixon administration of NSA spying on Americans on these shores in
contravention of Fourth Amendment rights.
Senator Russ Feingold (D-WI), who was the lone Senator to oppose the
Patriot Act in 2001, and John Sununu (R-NH) led the Senate~s opposition.
Others instrumental in the vote against the cloture motion were Senators
Patrick Leahy (D-VT), Harry Reid (D-NV), Ted Kennedy (D-MA), Larry Craig
(R-ID), Dick Durbin (D-IL), Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), Ken Salazar (D-CO),
Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), Chuck Hegel (R-NE), Max Baucus (D-MT), Charles
Schumer (D-NY) and Carl Levin (D-MI).
Had opponents of Patriot reform succeeded, their version of the bill
would have allowed the government to continue seizing law-abiding
Americans' most sensitive personal records without requiring a link
between the records sought and a suspected foreign terrorist. It would
also have left in place the automatic gag order that makes it difficult
to challenge the government's secret record demands. The ACLU and its
bipartisan allies, along with 400 communities, including seven states,
continue to call for meaningful changes to be made. Also contained in
the legislation is a proposal to revisit two Patriot Act powers in 2009.
The ACLU urged lawmakers to renew negotiations to ensure that precious
anti-terrorism resources are not wasted on innocent Americans
unconnected to a suspected terrorist.
The White House used every means to protect easy access by the FBI to
the private information of innocent Americans unconnected to suspected
foreign terrorists,~ said Lisa Graves, ACLU Senior Counsel for
Legislative Strategy.
Today’s vote is a beacon of hope for the continuing vitality of our Bill
of Rights. As Congress continues its examination of the Patriot Act, it
must add common sense protections to preserve our privacy.
Americans from across the political spectrum insist that this law be
reformed so America will both be safe and free. For more on the ACLU’s
concerns with the Patriot Act, go to: http://www.reformthepatriotact.org
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