The Badness of King George
This has the potential to be very, very big.
At least at this point in what is a developing story, it appears that President Bush decided in 2002 that the NSA should be allowed to conduct electronic surveillance of communications originating in the US without first obtaining the warrant required by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. On Saturday, in his weekly radio address, Bush said that not only had he authorized this surveillance at least 30 times, but that he would continue to do so.
This is important for a number of reasons. One is that Bush appears to have broken the law. That would be bad enough, but it actually may very well be bigger than that. It seems that Bush has decided that there are certain parts of the law that don’t apply to his administration during wartime.
This is unacceptable.
Presidents don’t get to decide which laws apply to them. They all apply. Every last one. Even in wartime. The President can’t just issue a secret executive order making it okay to operate outside the law. If Bush thinks that a particular law hinders his ability to protect the United States, then he should lobby Congress to change it.
Certainly, in times when national security is threatened, it’s appropriate to discuss whether we need to give up some of our freedom in order to protect ourselves. But that’s exactly the point. It needs to be a discussion. There needs to be transparency. And people in the US need to understand the tradeoffs that they’re making.
President Bush thinks that the NSA should be able to spy on people in the US without a warrant? He needs to make a public case and let Congress decide whether the law should be changed (and then he’ll likely have to convince the Supreme Court that the law doesn’t violate the Fourth Amendment). President Bush thinks that the CIA should be allowed to torture suspected terrorists in foreign prisons or send prisoners to other countries to be tortured? He has to convince us to withdraw from international treaties first.
The President is not above the law. The President is not a king.
This needs to be investigated aggressively. Ideally, this investigation would take place in Congress. But the modern political party (particularly the current Republican party) has dulled our Madisonian institutional antagonism to the point where I highly doubt this will happen in a meaningful way.
If Congress was truly serious about its responsibility to oversee the executive branch, it would start with a subpoena for the records of exactly what surveillance the Bush administration has done without appropriate warrants issued by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. Then, Congress would give the president this ultimatum: “If you claim executive privilege, we’ll hold up the Patriot Act. You want to take this to the Supreme Court? Fine, but it won’t be a court that features one Mr. Alito. And if you stonewall us even once, we’ll give widely expanded powers to Mr. Patrick Fitzgerald. Does that work for you, Mr. President? Great. We’ll see you on Tuesday. Under oath. And without your vice president.” And the first questions Congress would ask would be “The FISA gave you a perfectly serviceable system to approve legal surveillance. Why didn’t you use it? And who are you spying on without the approval of the FISC?”
But that won’t happen. Because most Republican congresspeople are Republicans first and members of Congress second.
I’m not presuming guilt here, and I’m not talking about punishment. I’m no lawyer or legal scholar, and I will readily admit that I’m relying on others to point out the relevant passages of the FISA. Maybe I’m missing something big here. As always, I’m open to well-reasoned arguments to the contrary. But it seems to me that these are serious charges that are at least worthy of investigation. And that needs to start with Congress resuming its oversight responsibility.
Update:
A few links for your perusal and so I can find them later…
Two press conferences today: Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and General Michael Hayden, Principal Deputy Director for National Intelligence and President George W. Bush.
And two GWU law professors offer some preliminary legal analysis: Orin Kerr, specialist in internet surveillance law, and Daniel Solove, specialist in information privacy law.
And, for good measure, one more piece from Obsidian Wings’ Hilzoy.
9 Ripples from “The Badness of King George”
dufflehead says:
December 20, 2005 at 1:12 am
here’s some more discussion over at democracynow
Kevin says:
December 20, 2005 at 8:12 am
Apparently he is a king.
Caleb says:
December 20, 2005 at 9:12 am
Excellent post, Zalm.
Jacke says:
December 20, 2005 at 11:12 am
Well, I think you might also find this article very informative, Zalm and friends:
http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110007703
A key excerpt, but please do read the entire article:
zalm says:
December 20, 2005 at 12:12 pm
I’ve been reading a lot about this, because there’s a lot I have to learn before I even feel right discussing some of this. And I don’t know per curiam from perchlorate. Or curium, even. But I’ll give this article a spin.
With all due respect, though, I feel roughly the same about an unsigned Wall Street Journal editorial as I imagine you would about an unsigned New York Times editorial, Jacke. For that reason, I actually chose to stay away from the unsigned pieces in the Times and the Washington Post when I wrote this.
Jacke says:
December 20, 2005 at 2:12 pm
Zalm, I learned long ago that when these “sky is falling” episodes happen due to some media story, that if I just wait a few days the truth will come out and it won’t be nearly as bad as the news story and the resulting sensationalized posturing of Democratic leaders in Congress make it seem to be. So, my comments are limited, as well.
Regarding the New York Times, the day before they broke this wiretap story, which they had been sitting on for a year and coincidentially broke just as the Patriot Act was under review, they broke a story about how American trained Iraqi troops had caught a truck coming across the border from Iran loaded with fraudulent ballots to effect the Iraqi election. Two minutes after I posted it to a private AOL political/friend group, I am a member of, I heard on the radio that the New York Times article was false. Do these people actually research anything before they print it!? :0
If the Democratic Party ever expects to be taken seriously again, they would do well to stop with the “Chicken Little” act and use a little common sense before they shoot their mouths off, in my opinion.
zalm says:
December 20, 2005 at 3:12 pm
Really? That act seemed to work out pretty well for the Republicans during most of the 90s.
I’m willing to be patient and wait for the truth. There are a lot of missing pieces to this story. But that doesn’t mean that the truth won’t come out without vigilance. Sometimes getting at the truth is a pretty noisy process.
I’ve read through yesterday’s press conferences multiple times, and they left me with a lot of questions.
All I’m saying right now is that this appears to me to be worthy of aggressive investigation. The President seems to be claiming some pretty broad powers that I’m not convinced we’ve given him. And he’s doing so secretly. This should give us pause, regardless of what political party we usually cheer for.
Jacke says:
December 20, 2005 at 4:12 pm
Yes, really. I wasn’t one of the ones shooting my mouth off in the 90’s, Zalm, though I can promise you that I did not, once, cast a vote for Bill Clinton, even when I was a resident of the good state of AR while he was Governor. This is something for which I am quite proud.
You are being very reserved, thoughtful and patient regarding this story. I am too. Time will tell.
I must ask you though, don’t some of the things that the Democratic Party leaders say, Howard Dean, for instance, embarrass the dog poo out of you!?
YEEEEAAAAARRRRRGGGGGHHHHH!!!
Kevin says:
December 21, 2005 at 9:12 am
Also see this Washing Times column by Bruce Fein, a Justice Department official under Ronald Reagan. This guy isn’t a liberal. At all.
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