ACLU Stays Focused on Winning Fight to Restore Habeas (5/10/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@dcaclu.org
Washington, DC - Despite a decision late Wednesday by the House Armed
Services Committee to pass the Defense Department authorization bill without
including a provision to restore habeas corpus, the ACLU remains confident
Congress will heed the public’s demand for the restoration of one of the core
protections in the Constitution and American law.
"We have always been proud that America stands for the values of due process
and fairness, but those values were severely damaged when President Bush signed
the Military Commissions Act that stripped habeas due process rights," said ACLU
Executive Director Anthony D. Romero. "Habeas must be restored and the ACLU will
keep the pressure on Congress to remedy this injustice. Our nation’s reputation
and principles are on the line."
"We’re disappointed that the effort to restore habeas wasn’t launched in the
House Armed Services Committee last night, but we’re not giving up the fight,"
said ACLU Washington Legislative Office Director Caroline Fredrickson. "America
demanded last fall that Congress take action to stop abuse of power and restore
the rule of law. Now Congress needs to act on that demand."
The ACLU remains undeterred in its perseverance to persuade the 110th
Congress to restore habeas. Over the next couple of months, there will be more
opportunities to restore habeas corpus and the ACLU is fully committed to that
goal. The majority of Americans join us in support of this issue.
The ACLU will take this fight straight to Capitol Hill on June 26 and is
urging thousands of activists from all over the United States to descend upon
Washington, D.C. for a Day of Action to Restore Law and Justice. Joined by
Amnesty International, the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights and the
National Religious Campaign Against Torture, they will deliver a message
directly to Congress to demand that they restore habeas corpus, end torture and
ensure fundamental liberties. The Day of Action highlights the loss of
fundamental rights and freedoms over the last six years, particularly the
constitutionally protected due process rights stripped by the Military
Commissions Act.
"While we would have liked the Armed Services Committee to have given habeas
restoration a quick and early push, Chairman Skelton and the House leadership
are clear that they will get it done, The Bush administration has trampled the
Constitution and abandoned American values and the rule of law - and so far
Congress has failed to act," said Chris Anders, ACLU Senior Legislative Counsel.
"But all Americans are going to have to join in this effort to restore the
Constitution and the American values that were abandoned last fall when the
Military Commissions Act was passed. The June 26 day of action will be a great
opportunity to show the breadth of support for habeas and the
Constitution."
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