Executive Director Anthony D. Romero's Remarks Regarding the ACLU's Priorities for the 110th Congress (1/9/2007)
Last
November, America voters rejected political scare tactics, government power
grabs and one-party rule. They chose civil liberties and sensible policies that
keep America safe and free. More importantly, Americans across the nation
exercised their democratic right to vote for true representation – and to prove
that, as a judge said in a recent landmark ruling rebuking the Bush
administration’s overreaching abuse of power - there are no hereditary kings
wielding unlimited power in our United States.
Today we’re on Capitol Hill
to ensure that the 110th Congress accepts its responsibility to check the
executive branch and demand real answers from an arrogant and unresponsive
administration.
Rights and freedoms
guaranteed by the Constitution - diminished under the previous Congress - must
be revived and protected. Senator Harry Reid stated in his letter to Senate
Democrats last week, “Our founding fathers foretold of the dangers of stifled
dissent, and we must now heed their advice.” I couldn’t agree more. The rights
and freedoms of the American people should always come first – especially when
we question authority.
Caroline and I made a list of
New Year’s resolutions for Congress
… Amend the Military Commissions Act and restore habeas corpus, stop
warrantless NSA wiretapping, protect our privacy, end torture and abuse, and
stop the president from hiding behind false claims of state
secrecy.
Just
one year after the New York Times broke the NSA surveillance scandal, we learned
through The Daily News that President Bush had quietly issued a signing
statement on December 20, 2006 that allows him to add opening our mail to the
growing list of privacy invasions. This truly is a war on America, not on
terror.
But
we did receive a few gifts from Congress and the courts since civil liberties
came under attack following 9/11.
The Supreme Court’s rejection of the military commissions system for
Guantanamo detainees in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, Congress’ Patriot Act filibuster,
another court’s rejection of national security letters, the ongoing disclosures
on spying and torture via our FOIA demands, the McCain Amendment on torture, and
the scrapping of over-the-top spying programs like CAPPS II, Total Information
Awareness and Operations TIPS – to name just a few.
They
don’t, however, mitigate the president’s systematic abuse of
power.
Whatever inherent powers the
president might have under Article II of the Constitution, they do not include
the power to conduct a warrantless, indefinite and unlimited domestic
surveillance campaign that is expressly prohibited by law. America must learn
the scope of the NSA warrantless wiretapping program - who has been spied on -
what has been done with the information - and who authorized it. In August 2006,
federal judge Anna Diggs Taylor found the NSA program both unconstitutional and
illegal as a result of an ACLU lawsuit. We’ll be returning to court later
this month to defend that landmark ruling before a federal appeals court. The Constitution says illegal
wiretapping is wrong - a federal judge reminded the president that it’s wrong -
and now it’s time for Congress to do its part and ensure the chief executive
enforces the law. Not break it. Congress should hold hearings as soon as
possible to get the answers and demand accountability.
But
the Bush administration avoids any accountability for its illegal behavior by
hiding behind a cloak of secrecy. His administration has used a variety of
tactics to deny court review of key facts that could reveal unconstitutional and
illegal actions by federal officials.
In
December of last year we saw yet again that over-classification of documents is
really a strong-arm tactic aimed at silencing the critics of authoritarian rule.
After the ACLU fought back, the government backed down from its attempt to force
us to hand over “any and all copies” of a previously “secret” memo detailing DoD
policy for photographing detainees. It should have never been classified
secret. Congress should see this as proof that investigating over-classification
and executive privilege should be a priority – who knows how many more times
Bush has illegally covered his tracks and for what
reasons.
The
main reason America knows anything about these or any other abuses is by reading
it in the papers or seeing it on TV. So to thwart the media’s role in exposing
questionable and illegal conduct, the administration wants to prosecute
journalists under the Espionage Act of 1917.
There has never been a better
time to fight for our rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution and
Bill of Rights. There has never been a more urgent
need to preserve fundamental privacy protections and our system of checks and
balances. Illegal government spying, abuse of executive privilege, provisions of
the Patriot Act and government-sponsored torture programs transcend the bounds
of law and our most treasured American values in the name of national security.
One-party rule proved that
absolute power corrupts absolutely.
Senator Reid concluded his
letter to Senate Democrats by saying, “ … the American people were telling us
last November that results are more important than party, and progress for the
nation must come before our own political priorities.” It
is time for both parties in Congress to stand together for civil liberties. The
ACLU is ready to stand with them.
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