THE NATION
Sen. Specter Puts Brakes on Patriot Act Extension
The
judiciary panel chairman joins critics of the law, delaying a vote. He
calls for four-year expiration dates on some provisions.
By Mary Curtius
Times Staff Writer
November 19, 2005
WASHINGTON — Senate Judiciary
Chairman Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) joined Friday with a bipartisan group of
critics to reject a proposed agreement to extend the Patriot Act,
dealing the White House an embarrassing setback and dashing its hopes
that Congress would vote on the sweeping antiterrorism law before
adjourning for Thanksgiving.
Speaking at a news conference called by senators who have threatened to
filibuster the House-backed legislation unless it provides greater
privacy protections, Specter said he disagreed with House negotiators
over the expiration dates for two of the law's 16 provisions.
"My view is that the Patriot Act needs further analysis and some
revision from what is in the proposed conference report at the present
time," Specter said. The statute expires Dec. 31, and pressure is
building on Congress to act.
Specter said that he wanted
four-year expiration dates for a provision that gives the FBI broad
leeway to seize personal and business information — the so-called
library provision — and a second provision that allows the FBI to
wiretap any phone a suspect uses. The current version has seven-year
expiration dates.
The failure to win a vote Friday came as the
White House fought mounting perceptions on Capitol Hill that President
Bush, whose public approval ratings have plummeted in recent weeks, is
becoming a lame duck. It also added to the perception of a
congressional Republican leadership struggling to hold its increasingly
fractious majority together on important votes.
The Patriot
Act, enacted just weeks after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, is the
centerpiece of the administration's domestic war on terrorism. Passed
by both the Senate and House by overwhelming margins, the law greatly
expanded the powers of the FBI and the Justice Department to combat
terrorism, in part by tearing down the legal wall between law
enforcement authorities and intelligence investigators.
It
met with resistance across the political spectrum, however, from those
who feared government abuse of its broad powers to track and
investigate terrorism suspects. Lawmakers from both parties have fought
for greater congressional oversight and for expiration dates on some of
the more controversial provisions.
The administration has urged
that all of the law's provisions be made permanent, saying it was a
vital tool in the war on terrorism. In a last-ditch effort to get a
vote this week extending the law, White House Chief of Staff Andrew H.
Card Jr. attempted to broker a deal between House and Senate
negotiators Thursday night, but failed to bridge the gap between the
two chambers.
Dana Perino, a White House press secretary, downplayed the significance
of the setback.
"We have been pleased with the progress that the conference has made,"
Perino said. "We are confident that the measure will pass. It is
critical that it passes by the end of the year, and we know that
Congress understands that."
But one Republican, Sen. John E.
Sununu of New Hampshire, blamed the White House for what he said was
"this unnecessary fiasco."
"The White House could have been
much more helpful throughout the process if they had really engaged
members of the Senate," Sununu said in an interview. Senior White House
and Justice Department officials, he complained, had failed "to reach
out earlier to members of the Senate to understand the substance of
these concerns" that he and others began to raise two years ago.
Sununu faulted the administration for resisting changes in a law that
was passed in haste when the nation was still in shock from the Al
Qaeda attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
"It
is the height of arrogance," he said, "to suggest you could pass
historic legislation in the weeks after a tragedy and know, for sure,
that it is perfect."
Jim Dempsey, executive director of the
Center for Democracy and Technology, a group that supports renewing the
Patriot Act but with greater protections for privacy rights and civil
liberties, said the administration and House leadership "misread the
sentiment in the Congress."
"I think that there is widespread
concern about some of the unrestricted powers in the Patriot Act, and
it's bipartisan," he said. "At the moment, it is an embarrassment for
the administration and the [congressional] leadership. But they could
make a few cosmetic changes" and win passage next month.
House
Judiciary Chairman F. James Sensenbrenner Jr. (R-Wis.) said, "We still
have work to do with the Senate conferees." He noted that the proposed
compromise would make permanent 14 of the law's 16 provisions. The
legislation would limit the time agents can conduct some types of
searches without notifying the targets, let companies challenge demands
that they turn over their records to aid an investigation, and take
other steps to protect privacy rights.n the U.S. House. He has been
reelected 16 consecutive times.
He voted for the 1991 Persian Gulf War resolution and the 2002
resolution granting President Bush authority to use force in Iraq. In
2004, he was one of two House members who voted to reinstate the
military draft. He is the top Democrat on the House Appropriations
Committee's defense subcommittee. He is the author of "From Vietnam to
9/11: On the Front Lines of National Security" (2003).
Copyright 2005 Los Angeles Times