The Senate Judiciary Committee has a hearing this morning beginning at 10:00 am ET regarding “FISA Amendments: How to Protect Americans’ Security and Privacy and Preserve the Rule of Law and Government Accountability.” It doesn’t look like C-Span will be covering the hearing this morning, but you can listen to the hearing on the Senate Judiciary Committee feed.
Because this isn’t a televised hearing, I’m going to have to type much more quickly in order to capture the testimony. Please hold comments to a minimum so that I’m not having to put together new threads too frequently — I miss things in the stop and start on that, so the fewer times I have to put up a new thread, the better for everyone. Background material on all of today’s witnesses can be found here.
This thread starts the second panel: Black, Philbin, and Halperin.
___________________________
DiFi, in her introductions, hassles Halperin for never teaching on the west coast.
Black: Innovation through open networks. We urge you not to weaken the hand of American companies that must deal with intelligence demands overseas. We do not want to be police agents. Not just from third party liability, we need protection from improper government requests. The SSCI will allow too much surveillance of Americans without a court order. Disturbingly, it gives them immunity. If we continue to make up rules as we go along, any violation can be covered up with retroactive immunity. Retroactive immunity is premature at best. Immunity would perpetuate uncertainty in the future. Future improper requests will be accompanied by a wink, the promise that immunity will be granted once things settle down.
[I wish he had said it's a competitive disadvantage for those protecting Americans.]
Philbin: Gained experience during service at DOJ. Learned that electronic surveillance is vital tool.
DiFi Pull your mike close.
Philbin: Three points. 1) Support that allow exec to target comm of people reasonably believed to be overseas. 2) Support for immunity for telecom. Warranted for several reasons. The right thing to do. In wake of 9/11, corporations authorized to assist intell, corporations should be able to accept representations from govt. Notion of fairness, as was mentioned in earlier session. Common law immunity to assist law enforcement officer. Allowing to proceed would risk leaking intell information. State Secrets is not cure all. Longer suits proceed, longer this info will leak. Failing to provide immunity would discourage cooperation in future emergencies. 3) Disagree that carriers should be forced to serve gatekeeper role. Telecom not well suited to second guess. Conducting a review of request would require access to info that is not and should not be available outside of govt. But there should also be a review of legal bases. Ensuring that all IC activities adhere to law. The question of liability is distinct. The method is through rigorous oversight within the Executive Branch, and oversight with Congress. Private lawsuits not the best way to conduct this oversight.
[Well, then demand the Administration submit to oversight, then.]
Halperin: I hope committee will look at views of other groups. I want to look at immunity and sole means. The discussion totally ignores history and legislation before us. Historically, if you’ve got a certification from the govt that says it adheres to FISA, you must cooperate. If you get something else, they’re supposed to say no. [Halperin doesn't say it, but we know from the SSCI report that this is precisely what happened.] The law was absolutely clear. To cite the common law that you need to cooperate ignores the fact that Congress answered that question with great precision in FISA. There are ways to be clearer, to say, you either have a warrant, or something else. That’s a rule going forward bc it’ll leave them to cooperate because there’ll be no judgment. We’re telling them to cooperate in the future to cooperate only if govt meets standard for certification. I’d urge you to add language that “when purpose is to learn about American, must be FISA.” You do need to give FISC more leeway, on minimization. I think a judge would say, I will decide it. Congress needs to make it absolutely clear that Congress needs to supervise every aspect of FISA.
DiFi: If one added a few words to say warrant must accompany. [Reads from bill]
Halperin: Other change you need to make is in D, certification. You need to make it clear that a certification has to be based on specific law.
DiFi: Philbin, what do you think of that?
Philbin: Not sure if I have a well thought out response. Relationship is complex, and that is how exclusivity would be determined. I think it’d be a mistake to restrict how certification provided.
DiFi: Except, TSP now under FISA. It seems to me that what Halperin suggested is really the way to handle this. Presidential cert doesn’t provide guarantees to telecom (certainly doesn’t this time, and I’ve read it). The court provides the guarantee to the citizen and the telecom. We’re going to put as much of this under FISA as possible.
Halperin: Urge you to require govt to get FISA before cert. If you’ve got an emergency provision, it says to providers you do it.
DiFi: And Court will give program warrant. I don’t think it hobbles executive at all.
Philbin: An improvement in FISA that court can provide programmatic approvals. Impossible to predict now every exigency. You want to legislate immunity to cut down immunity going forward. If objective is to provide immunity only where that kind of paper is given will achieve that effect. Not possible to predict now that FISA would have everything covered.
DiFi: We’ve reached a stage where executive didn’t go to court. That’s a big lesson for us in preventing this from happening again.
Specter: Mr. Black, I note you worked with Kissinger during Nixon. That might have been the time when Halperin was under surveillance.
Halperin: So did I?
Specter: Was Mr. Black under surveillance under Kissinger?
Specter: Why not indemnify participation. I want to thank you for standing up with Mr. Comey. Why not indemnification.
Philbin: I don’t think the problem with indemnification is that the lawsuit proceeds with the carriers bearing the cost of defense. It’s not the money that is the problem. The burden of the litigation. Reputational and other harms of going through the litigation.
Specter: what info is going to be disclosed? We couldn’t even get it disclosed to the Chair of the Committee.
Philbin: the decision not to give it to Chair was made by executive. The decision here would be made by an Article III judge.
Specter: Doesn’t the President have Article II power?
Halperin: Almost all the circuit decisions are pre-FISA. SCOTUS has never spoken on this. I think there may be extreme power in extraordinary situation when under direct attack. Whatever power there is you can’t take away. What I think Congress has right to do is legislate rules for service providers. You cooperate with a warrant.
Specter: You want it limited to counter-terrorism only. Why shouldn’t we listen to what Iran is doing with nukes?
Halperin: We do listen to this. There are different issues with terrorists in the US. The old rules were good enough in listening to the Soviet Union.
Specter: Agree that only two of us here to question you. You have not been treated as you should be. Not discriminated against.
Hearing adjourned.
Related posts:
- Holder Refuses to Stand by Statements Saying Violating FISA Breaks the Law
- Can Skittles help fix the PATRIOT Act and FISA?
- House Judiciary Committee to Propose PATRIOT and FISA Reforms
- al-Haramain Reply Filed; Constitution, Rule of Law in Judge Walker’s Hands
- FISA v AUMF: Bush Wiretap Program Based on Lies





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emptywheel!
BADA BING!
Philbin is certainly spouting the GOP line. Hope someone takes him apart.
Jim Clausen @ 3
Hahahahaha
Philbin’s argument is reminiscent of the “We had to destroy the village in order to save it” line from Vietnam. This time it is “We have to break the law and get away with it” to uphold the rule of law.
The only way you can understand this kind of thinking is to accept that it is being done in bad faith, that these guys know that it was all illegal and that they don’t care.
Boy, EW must thank her lucky stars for Feinstein. She really is slow speaking and slow-witted!
Sounds like Philbin is trying to use the ‘were the good guy’s’ approach to the point it’s over the top.
Gimme a break,
The genie is out of the bottle pal, laws were broken, repeatedly, and no amount of immunity is going to change that fact.
Ann in AZ @ 6
And vapid to boot.
Doesn’t Halperin have some personal experience being under surveillance–circa Richard Nixon?
mighty mouse @ 9
They’ve been talking about how his phone was tapped due to his being on Nixon’s enemies list. So, yes, he does have personal experience with this.
Hearing adjourned! They can’t be serious! But I know they are.
Ooh! Can stop biting tongue now and post all the outrage we felt while listening?
and also..Marcy! You do a great job. Easy to catch up when I had to leave the room and the webcast. Thank you.
OT.but an SJC issue..
Ed Gillespie must be the one who took Murkasey to the “woodshed”.
link
My wife works in the health care field, and does most of her work in the field, caring for patients who are dying at home. Her HMO is has purchased a contract with Verizon where the phones that they are required to use are pretty much like those ankle bracelets you wear if you’re under house arrest. The phone tracks your every move. This technology is kind of Orwellian and could be abused easily by a company like Verizon in partnership with your employer. They won’t just have your phone records, they’ll know where you are and what you’re doing every minute. I’ve included a link below that describes the product.
I can understand companies wanting to make sure their employees aren’t stealing time, but this kind of scrutiny is creepy and has a lot of potential for abuse. Good old Verizon.
Here’s the link to the product:
http://b2b.vzw.com/productsser…..nager.html
re: Verizon’s employee-tracking device– this is just one more of those thousands of things technology now allows that ordinary citizens don’t have a clue about. So, they think, “hey, I’m not a terrorist; it doesn’t hurt me if the government can listen to anybody they want to.” Grrr.
btw, my first impression reading your comment was that this was tracking for the elderly pateients! Took a mo before it dawned on me it was the emplyees being tracked!
Does this sound worrisome?
link
The more of this type of crap that I read; I am beginning to think that the Congressional hearings that we watch so closely are missing the big picture.
MSNBC conducting a text messaging poll on last night’s debate because, you know, GE isn’t making enough money so they’ve come up with this latest scheme.
Obama camp clearly cookin’ the books today…text shilling via Mika this a.m. and now this “poll.”
MSNBC, what gives? Should we DFHs take up a collection? Clearly you’re too impoverished to stay in journalism.
SteveAR
Maybe they see the big picture and maybe they don’t.
Instead of nibbling at the small details like they do, how do you think they should deal with the big picture?
Sincere question.
OT..
Judiciary Committee sets Mukasey vote for Tuesday
xjt @ 14
I haven’t worked there since 2001, but my last salaried job included field work, taking photos and observing the structural categories(masonry as opposed to wood, etc.)of commercial real estate properties that had recently been sold. The company that I hired on to five years earlier had been sold, and the new company provided their own trucks for the field work. Those trucks were equipped with GPS that would track the field worker’s every move. One person made the mistake of taking it to a car wash on a Saturday. I can’t remember if that worker was fired or whether he/she was severely reprimanded, because they didn’t have permission to take the vehicle out on Saturday.
EW – my work looks like crayons next to yours!
How about that Philbin? The President said
the Program was Legal and only the Executive Branch can review it?
Steve-AR @ 16
I believe he has been doing this for his entire term anyway. Signing statements and “Executive Privilege” and “State Secrets” are just other words for “I am the state”, just like these “Administrative” rulings he spouts. None of them are legal but Congress doesn’t do jack to reign it in ergo they are complicit and OK with it.
One of the things that bothered me most about the witness – the first one, wainstein, especially, was the constant refrain of “good faith.”
I don’t care about good faith, I care about following the law and the Constitution! You don’t need a good faith argument if you keep to the Constitution and the law! Grrrr, some more.
SteveAR
I didn’t mean to imply that you were quibbling with small details, I was trying to poing to what They are doing.
Just to clarify.
Steve-AR @ 19
Is there any concensus regarding how they’ll vote given the comments from this AM?
Steve-AR @ 13
Let us analyze “waterboarding”. We need to look at its parts. First, “water” is not illegal and is necessary for human life. I can’t see how anyone could have a serious problem with this. As for “board”, it is a piece of wood. Our homes are made up of just such boards. Again how can anyone have a problem with them. They are as American as apple pie as far as I am concerned. So I can only conclude that those who oppose the union of these two innocent objects into waterboarding must be anti-life and unAmerican.
Yes, it’s silly, but specious, dishonest arguments seem to be all we can expect from this Administration and the Republicans and Democrats who continue to support it.
demi @ 18
I have no idea..but the accelerating claims and use of exec power during the run up to the ‘08 election doesn’t make sense within “our normal political framework”. (Disclosure..I have never seen a UFO and I used to think all conspiracy theories were crap)
Hugh @ 26
it’s a watershed moment.
radiofreewill @ 21
I strongly suspect we’ll be seeing videos of Feingold saying repeatedly, “I hope my colleagues are listening to this!”
Ann in AZ @ 25
I hope the predictions that th enomination is “in trouble” are accurate. Again, I’m bothered that the only objection being raised is the refusal to admit waterboarding is torture. If he caves on that, will they vote yes?
Toi me ( and I did hear someone raise this somewhere on the radio, I think), the most disturbing part of his responses was his endorsement of the President-gets-todecide-what’s-legal theory, and that he would not enforce Congressional subpoenas, as if Congress were NOT a do-equal branch.
The guy looked okay at first glance, but now I think the results with him could be nearly as bad as with Gonzales.
tejanarusa @ 23
Throw Reagan into their faces: trust (good faith) but verify (warrant, cert letter).
EW, any idea why the second panel was so brief? Seemed pretty truncated for such an important discussion. Is there something else going on this afternoon?
Praedor Atrebates @ 22
Prety good working definition of an absolutist government, just the kind of thing we got rid of in 1776 or thereabouts.
re: Mukasey vote
I read yesterday that Leahy said they won’t be making any declarations until Mukasey returns a 460 question survey they sent him.
They already don’t like the answer to Torture, now they want to see the other 459 before they vote.
Fire in the Dirkson building.
Hugh @ 26
Hugh – Perhaps if we tell them that water and boards are of the same sex, they will suddenly dislike the combination and stop the “union” and practice…..
Steve-AR @ 16
The Democratic strategy appears to be “do nothing no matter what”, so Bush will get away with this too. Really disgusting.
radiofreewill @ 34
You mispoke. I believe you meant to say: They already don’t like the answer to Torture, now they want to see the other 459 before they vote for confirmation.
See, Spector and Graham have already gotten all lovey with him on his non-answer answer to the waterboarding question. There was never any REAL question that either would actually vote against this clown. Specter, in particular, ALWAYS does this sort of thing.
A few Dems will hold out but not enough to stop confirmation. Enough will be “convinced” that he’s OK (besides, “The President is entitled to appoint ANYONE he wants”).
This just in:
On dKos, Rep. Jane Harman has just written a semi-coherent rant on FISA and fled the scene, calling out a dKos diarist. Her office has confirmed the post.
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2007/10/31/10182/509
BTW: Is there anything out that that says, “Any attack on the State of Israel shall be regarded as an attack upon the U.S.A.?”
Couple that with Russia announcing that an attack upon Iran shall be regarded as an attack upon the Russian Federation, and you have ‘entangling alliances’ of the sort that brought about WWI, IIRC.
And what would Russia attack? What targets are already dialed into those ICBMs with their MIRV warheads? Aren’t they still pointed at us? Has anybody with a vestige of sanity really thought this thing through??
OT–
Karen Hughes’s “achievements”:
Praedor Atrebates @ 38
cue DiFi’s ears perking up to that line of reasoning.
This sums things up nicely:
http://www.salon.com/comics/tomo/2007/10/29/tomo/
OT..
It’s official: As expected, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, one of the country’s largest and most politically influential unions, has decided to endorse Hillary, union officials tell us.
(snip)
The union board’s vote for Clinton was 23-10, according to a union official.
TPM
Re: Mukasey (the latest):
Dopey DiFi weighs in:
Biodun @ 45
We’ll see. Me being totally untrusting of ANYONE in government anymore, D or R, I automatically will suspect that if the Dems DO scuttle Mukasey, that it will be done to provide a bone to the base while they then turn around and give immunity to the Telecoms.
behind the fall at 33:
Or thought we did.
Of course, those who did the getting-rid-of expected Congress to be “jealous” of its rights and fight the inevitable attempts by the executive to take more power.
This Congress, not so much.
And now I must go do the tasks delayed by being glued to the screen once more by FDL’s superb liveblogging of an important event, uncovered by the MSM.
Thanks again FDL!
dov12348 @ 39
Semi-coherent? LOL! I especially liked this part:
The ol’ VPM again. Only this time she thinks it it made up of Repugs. That’s a telling statement. Thinking of switching parties are you Janey?
As to a “better idea”, I think anyone could do better than you Janey. How about:
No feckin’ FISA update at all! Since the PPA sunsets in February 08, Junya and company would then have to again live under the old FISA, which by the way, worked pretty well for the last 30 years. Warrants for eavesdropping from a feckin’ court, doncha know?
And Janey, why do accomplices always try to hide the evidence? You would know, wouldn’t you?
Oh, one more thing – my job involves taking complaint and problem phone calls all day. Yesterday a caller, male from AZ, I believe, said, apropos of not much to do w/ service– “I’m voting for a third-party candidate this time, not Dem, not Repub, to save our country!”
Just an interesting observation.
dov12348 @ 39
The idea that Jane changed her stripes after the primary challenge was a joke then and is a joke now.
tejanarusa @ 50
IMHO, anyone who says that is either a Thug Troll, mentally deficient or has been sleeping for the past seven years.
I agree with your assessment. I just wish someone would describe to me the difference between a tyrant and what the President is trying to tactically create. With the secretive maneuvers and the circular CYA strategies they’ve been displaying, and their willingness to suspend or dispense with any law that gets in their way, how does this administration differ from that of any other despot known to man?
Biodun @ 46
Dianne Feinstein thinking is always a bad sign. So can she be clearer and more definitive in whether she will vote for or against the nomination than oh say, Mukasey was in his response?
Henry Waxman should be speaker of the house.
Mukasey can’t say it is illegal. Cheney and Addington won’t let him. If Mukasey said it was illegal that would place in jeopardy not just those who performed it but those (i.e. Cheney and Addington) who sanctioned it. BTW with Cheney and Addington pulling Mukasey’s strings on this one, what does this say about the claim that Mukasey will be independent as AG and resist White House pressure?
More raw meat for Bill’o et al.
Link
this ought to scare the bejeebers out the neighborhood kids tonight.
(homage the The New Yorker cover art)
Hugh @ 56
Ed Gillespie said it’s legal; in the current power structure, his word is final.
The Dems are gonna pass on Mukasey, and then just look the other way and allow W to recess appoint him, so they can’t get blamed. JMHO
punaise @ 58
BOO!
Badwater @ 55
Just listening to this on Sibel Edmonds http://www.antiwar.com/blog/20…..-ryland-2/
Waxman’s participation in keeping her information from the public is disturbing.
Ed Gillespie is repeating the White House line but Cheney and Addington are the ones who created that line.
Hugh @ 54
My contempt for both my Senators, DiFi and Boxer, knows no bounds. DiFi is a rethug good ole boy in dreadful drag and Bar the Lieberman’s devoted best Senate friend. :~(
newspaperbrat @ 64
‘fraid so…
Totally OT
By MARIA RECIO
Mcclatchy-tribune
WASHINGTON — Even as the 2008 Democratic presidential candidates prepared to debate Tuesday night, Ralph Nader, a controversial figure from the last two presidential campaigns, sued the Democratic Party, the Kerry-Edwards 2004 campaign and affiliated groups for allegedly sabotaging his 2004 campaign.
Is he being paid, yet again, by the repugnant party?
nomolos @ 66
Is he being paid, yet again, by the repugnant party?
It seems to come from a sincere belief in the value of a third party and the steps the Ds took to prevent it. His lawyer was on democracynow this morning.
OT..
Well worth a short read..
TPM
Mr. Nance, the former Seal instructor has been involved in waterboaring hundreds of people..there is no doubt in his mind.
Democrats sue Nader for sabotaging the country in 2000.
Nader sues, claims Democrats sabotaged his 2004 campaign.
Nader announces plans to sue himself in 2008 saying it is the only way that he can look more absurd and irrelevant.
Hugh @ 69
A Boy Named Sue
eCAHNomics @ 67
If Nader were sincere, I would think that he would be doing a lot more outreach to progressive blogs like this one. Also his interest in third parties seems to occur at 4 year intervals. If he were sincere, he might try party organizing in the off years.
I guess I see Nader nowadays as less of a rebel and more of an impediment.
Valerie Plame, on Daily Show last night (a rerun, I think) said that she was concerned about Iraq WMD’s and that there had been no WMD inspectors in Iraq since 1998.
IIRC, U N Inspector Hans Blix was in Iraq in 2001 and he was claiming to have made some progress re: cooperation relative to WMD inspections. In fact, Blix said that inspections were well under way and no weapons were being found. I heard this with my own ears. (This was before the attack on Iraq, but concurrent with the Persian Gulf build up of American Military Forces.)
Ms. Plame Wilson mentioned Alice In Wonderland. I feel like I am In Wonderland after hearing what I interpreted to be a misrepresentation of events at that time. Am I wrong?
Hugh @ 71
With his Raiders, Nader did some very good things as consumer advocate. Now he’s just an egotistical maniac of a politician.
He’s also an unbending ascetic, stubborn to a fault. As a woman friend of mine put it: “Who wants to vote for a monk?”
nomolos @ 66
Is he being paid, yet again, by the repugnant party?
Actually, I’m being drawn to the reluctant conclusion that the Democratic leadership is more interested in Power (and More Of It) than in principle, and seem only interested in defending the Constitution when it advances their partisan interests. If Al Gore was on the ballot for President on a Green Party ticket, I wouldn’t want him to have all the problems Nader had with the Democrats. Yes, I was angry with Nader in 2004. But he does have a point, if we are ever to have a third party to challenge the current Duopoly.
Bob in HI
hackworth @ 72:
Yep. Hans Blix was in Iraq in 2002-2003:
Valerie Plame: WTF?
Hugh @ 71
Fair points. I didn’t mean to imply that I agreed with what his lawyer said, merely to point to more information on the subject.
bobschacht @ 74
It seems as if two parties is the “stable state” for our non-parliamentary form of government. Political parties come and go but two seems to be the steady state number. I wonder if this is a tradition based on “psychology” or if it is intrinsic to our form of government?
UNSCOM left Iraq in 1998. UN weapons inspectors returned to Iraq in late 2002 as UNMOVIC. What is important to realize is that UNSCOM estimated that it accounted for and destroyed 90-95% of Saddam’s WMD programs. This made it virtually impossible for Saddam to reconstitute his WMD programs in any significant way. Also it made most of what little he had left unusable simply because of the time frames involved.
Given that a nuclear program is a very large industrial undertaking, there was zero chance that he had an active nuclear program in 2002 as the Bush Administration alleged. As Scott Ritter once pointed out, holding on to biological stocks was not feasible since they degrade over time. All of the plants that had produced chemical weapons had likewise been destroyed by weapons inspectors.
So in short what Saddam had was gone by 1998 and the Bush Administration grossly exaggerated the problems in rebuilding any of this and then hiding it. That is the difficulty that I have with this whole presumption of Iraqi WMD programs. If the blogosphere had been around at the time, I believe they would not have been able to get away with these assertions.
Bush has decided to go around and avoid Congress altogether in a breathtaking power grab.
Let the FISA bill expire.
Start impeachment now and keep their sorry butts tied up until they are safely out of office, and then get them on criminal charges.
Steve-AR @ 77
Your stable state is not a state of nature but stems from strong efforts by both parties to keep others’ out.
eCAHNomics @ 76
Agreed. I just clump Nader with all these figures who did some good work 20 and 30 years ago but now contribute to the national debate only in negative ways.
Mad Dogs @ 49
Mad Dogs @ 49
My allowing her bilge as semi-coherent was done in a weak moment and far too forgiving. My bad.
I hope someday she at least realizes this insane “you can’t blame us – we need a veto-proof majority” mindset is now killing our troops (e.g., the supplemental).
eCAHNomics @ 80
I am at a loss to see where Nadir advances the position of the Greens or any other ‘third’ party by proceeding with this ridiculous suit. In Germany the Greens realized that starting at the top i.e. running for Chancellor was not the way to go about creating a viable third party. They went back and got candidates from everything from Dog Catcher to Police commission and have now created a very viable Green party.
If Nadir had any interest other than self love he would be out there raising monies for local candidates but he is more interested in garnering money from the repugs for his own benefit. The man revolts me.
Sorry I somehow doubled up on that post.
nomolos @ 83
Again, I’m not defending Nader or his tactics. Just trying to point out some realities about power politics.
As a matter of fact, I agree with you. Political movements must be grown organizally from the population. And though a good leader speeds the process,* Nader has done nothing that I’m aware of on the grass roots level. If you watched him when he did the book tour on his memoir, he reeked of sanctimony.
*Even if the movement had a good leader, and strong grass routes, Rs & Ds would do their utmost to destroy it. And thus we have a 2 party system.
OT
I just got an email from James Carville asking me what my Halloween costume will be. Why does he persist in being a straight man? It is with great restraint that I do not summon up a nasty little joke.
eCAHNomics @ 80
eCAHNomics @ 80
I was thinking more along these lines..rather than conspiracy..even though the latter maybe the case today.
Wiki
eCAHNomics @ 85
With movements such as Blue America I believe we are on the road to another party. By supporting identified progressive candidates in many races and with the active support of Toobers I believe we can slowly turn the tide from the Rs & Ds (RDs?) owning all. Of course it would help if we could get the vast amount of money out of the picture.
Chimpy goes on the warpath:
Even as Congress Dems gives him everything he wants. Chimpy behaves like a language-challenged petulant 16-year-old.
Biodun @ 89
Bush’s psychosis is getting worse..Dennis is asking the right questions. We maybe heading into the most dangerous year in American History.
BWAHAHAHAHA! He must be in some kind of mirror-universe.
I see no fiscally prudent GOP president here. And nationalized health care sounds like a great idea.
nomolos @ 88
Yes, Blue America has the ingredients of success: taking advantage of new media and being grass roots, to name 2. Also, being in step with the majority of Americans doesn’t hurt.
And the nice thing is that we don’t necessarily need a 3d party if we can get enough people elected as progressive Ds. Much easier than breaking off.
I think all of W’s aggressiveness is just politics to hammer into the public that the Dems are weak. He’s challenging them left and right, and they just don’t stand up.
Also, if he were a real dictator, he wouldn’t bother with appearing publicly anymore, he would just act…the latest news about the run around directives he’s planning are just that…he will then be the dictator, unless Congress steps in right now and starts impeachment hearings. It doesn’t matter if there are enough votes to indict…just tie up the Administration now, until they are forced to leave.
New thread upstairs.
Steve-AR @ 87
I am not familiar with that work. Thanks for the link.
There are many things that could be done to make U.S. system more democratic, which a 2 party system is not. For example, start with electoral college. Then there’s winner-take-all. An a whole other list. Remember Lani Guinier? She was working on ways that voting could be changed to give minorities more rights, instead of having a cockamamie gerrymandering.
But because Rs & Ds benefit so much from status quo, change will probably never happen.
eCAHNomics @ 95
Indeed thanks for link. Very interesting.
I am sorry this part of the hearing didn’t go longer. It could have been interesting. It was good to see all the Democratic questioners this morning using various degrees of skepticism.
Steve-AR @ 13
Really! Who precisely has said that it was legal? Can we have names and public statements? And since it isn’t torture can they demonstrate that it isn’t cruel and unusual punishment?
Hugh @ 71
And perhaps be more interested in assisting the success of the party at the Congressional and Senate, as well as other local levels.
hackworth @ 72
Blix visited Iran several times in the 1990’s…the last time in 1997. I think Blix had retired by 2001, with Al Baradei in charge of the IAEA.
http://www.johntirman.com/insight jump 4.html
hackworth @ 72
Are you sure she was talking about Iraq and not IRAN? IIRC correctly her own husband, Joe Wilson, argued that the Inspections regime in IRAQ were going well and that the US should withhold any declaration of war until they were completed and evidence of WMD’s actually detected. That’s why he was so p.o.’d when they Bush Administration declared war and pulled the IAEA inspection teams OUT. I’m sure either Plame misspoke…or you mis-heard.
in case anyone else missed the hearings and wants to give it a listen – here is an mp3 audio rip.
Steve-AR @ 77
If you look at the history of political parties, third parties actually split from one competitive party…and then that party almost always loses the general election. There are only a couple of cases where third parties actually ascended into the second party after the schism. The best case of that was in 1856-60, when the Whigs split off the Republicans. But then the Democrats also split. Making four parties. Lincoln won with a bare plurality, but the Civil War created wholesale transformations of the political landscape, allowing the “Party of Lincoln” to become the next ascendant party. Whigs were no more.
But more usual is the short term split, based upon a charismatic figure. Even when the “Bullmoose” Progressives split from the Republicans, and Populists from the Democrats…the splitters failed to win. Woodrow Wilson of the Democrats came out ahead.
The Dixiecrat split (they later began to slowly become Republicans)led to Eisenhower winning easily. Some argue that George Wallace finalized this when he created the American Independant Party. That led to the final shift of many segregationist Democrats to the Republicans~ Nixon’s “Southern Strategy”. That, of course, led to the Rockefeller Republicans being marginalized and Reagan being elected despite John Anderson’s creation of a new party. The influx of AIP’s into the party balanced off the loss to the centrist National Unity Party.
Then there was Ross Perot ( zapping Bush I far more than Clinton); and Nader, who joined up with the nascent Green Party.
History suggest that unless there is schism in both parties one of the splinters will not succeed initially, and usually only after it has been a contending party and captured Congressional seats.
cinnamonape @ 103
but what if success doesn’t mean electoral success, but instead policy success – ie their best ideas become mainstream and are taken up by one of the main 2 parties?
how often do you think third parties have been successful in getting their ideas accepted?
eCAHNomics @ 80
But what political party would not do that? No party wants additional competition. They do want schisms within the other party, however. That’s why you often find opposing parties trying to encourage dissent within the opposing party. And once the splinter is formed, they even lend it financial support. Go look at Naders campaign contribors, particular on the eve of the election and you’ll find a deluge of people who are well known Republican donors. That’s the irony of the situation. These donors knew they wouldn’t successfully influence Nader with their cash…but they also knew it hurt Gore by having Nader sap votes away from him.
And a two-party system is facilitated by the allocation of Congressional and Senate seats by a winner take all system by district. In Europe Parliamentary seats are often allocated by vote % in a common slate. Thus if a party wins 10% of the vote, they get 10% of the seats.
nomolos @ 88
This is much more likely a successful strategy. If one can increase the number of progressives they can at least influence legislation or block it. At about 20% they become a critical bloc. And at that point they may even attract others who WERE moderates to shift toward the progressive position. The history of the “progressive parties” that followed the days of the Tammany Hall, robber barons and laissez-faire economics. These factions were ascendant until WW1…although there was certainly some pretty strong counterattacks, particular on Debs and the Labor Movements. But there were a lot of progressive reforms introduced (the initiative, recall, child labor laws, 8-hour work days, womans vote, etc).
eCAHNomics @ 95
Some communities are moving to a “proportionate” voting system in which voters select choices from 1-10. Once a candidate reaches a target number of 1st place votes his second choices are allocated (proportionate to his remaining unnecessary 1st place votes). Those are added to the remaining candidates until they cross the threshhold, and so on. That way a persons votes aren’t “wasted” if they happen to support a really popular candidate. This presumably prevents “fringe candidates” from being elected, while more popular individuals are shut out.
But something like a proportionate system in Congress would require a Constitutional Amendment.
And I thought a revision of the campaign finance laws to forbid lobbyists and corporations from donating to candidates would also require one. But then I found just how flimsy the legal argument for treating corporations as “individuals” actually was. I now believe that, properly framed, a legislative act could clearly state that only citizens could make campaign contributions and define corporations as NON-CITIZENS since they cannot vote, are not born or naturalized as citizens, etc. Citizens are PERSONS…human beings in the Constitution…not “property” or an “association”.
selise @ 104
That’s a more complicated question. I don’t think the “Mugwumps” had much impact at all. The Free Soil party eventually became the Republican part…they favored abolition in the newly admitted territories that were becoming states. That had a great amount of influence as an idea, became law, and was the trigger that led to the Civil War.
Can’t think Anderson or Perot had lasting influence. Hard to say if the Greens have yet to have an impact on getting their ideas accepted. I lack the historical perspective…not enough time has passed.
The Progressive and Bullmoose parties likely drove other parties to embrace reforms of the corrupt political system of the early 1900’s.
And it’s argued that FDR embraced many of the ideas of the 1930’s Soc*al*sts and Communists in moderated form to create the “New Deal”. He wanted to undercut the potential of an actual right- or left-wing revolution during the Depression.
The AIP/Dixiecrats didn’t preserve segregation but much of their heritage is alive and well in the Republican party…but that was after they were absorbed INTO the Pugs. They’ve since become the “base”.
**Edited and realed by MOD.
cinnamonape @ 108 –
thanks for the history lesson – much appreciated!
my knowledge of our history is quite limited (especially compared to yours!)…. but i’m not aware of a time that progressive (as we now use the term) policies were implemented by one or both of the two parties from within – am i wrong to think it has always taken political “threats” (not referring specifically to threats of violence) from the outside – from social movements and/or third parties?
Here is the fundamental issue: How the hell can Congress do anything since Bushco won’t tell them anything? The State Secret dodge is just Bullshit. What we’re talking about is unlawful, unconstitutional spying on US citizens. That’s why we have a fucking constitution! It’s to protect the rights of the people and to LIMIT the activities of government. There are no “State Secrets” when it comes to violating the Constitution. It seems the only thing Leahy and DiFi and everyone else should be saying is: “Give us and the United States Citizens all of the information or we’ll start impeachment proceedings for the president’s violation of his oath and duty to uphold and protect the Constitution and to follow the laws.”
It drives me absolutely nuts that they’re even discussing immunity for Telcoms when it’s very clear that Bush knowingly violated the Constitution and the law. The Constitution is there to PROTECT US. It isn’t there to allow secret spying on US just cuz Bus wants to! Read the Goddamn thing! It prevents the government from spying on us and every thing else related to this hearing is just Bullshit and dryhumping. It’s simple: enforce or rights under the Constitution or get out.