House Declines To Vote On Telecom Immunity
freedom_india alerts us to news that the House of Representatives declined to bring the surveillance reform bill to vote, prompting House Republicans to walk out in the middle of a session. The bill, recently passed by the Senate, includes retroactive immunity for the telecommunications companies who assisted with illegal domestic wiretaps. The walk-out comes after a proposal was shot down on Wednesday that would have extended the current legislation for another three weeks.
Read my lips, Bush: We ain't skeered of no terrorists.
My blog
The President himself doesn't feel the need to mention that. He was admonishing Congress yesterday, claiming that:
Of course, as you said, all previously authorized wiretaps under the expiring act go on, and as the House Intelligence Chair put it:
In summary: There really doesn't seem to be a need for this law at all, let alone the provisions like telecom immunity.
Yes, the House can enforce the contempt citation without the aid of the Justice Department. Under the rules for inherent contempt, after the citation is passed, the cited party would be arrested by the Sergeant-at-Arms for the House and brought to the floor to answer charges. However, the statutory procedure, which is the one that involves the Justice Department, has been used more often since its inception in 1857, and the inherent procedure hasn't been used since 1934.
____
~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey
Ted Kennedy on FISA:
Kennedy on YouTube.
--- guns don't kill people, people with guns kill people ---