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CRP Sponsors Condemn Bush Signing Statement on Patriot Act Oversight
March 30, 2006
On
March 30, the sponsors of the Campaign for Reader Privacy (CRP) -- the American
Booksellers Association, the American Library Association, the Association of
American Publishers, and PEN American Center -- released a statement accusing
President Bush of "undermining a new law that expands Congressional oversight
of the USA Patriot Act, including the provision that authorizes searches of
bookstore and library records."
In a "signing statement" issued on March 9, soon
after he approved a bill that reauthorized the expiring sections of the Patriot
Act, the President said he reserved the right to ignore provisions of the bill.
"The Executive Branch shall construe the provisions
of H.R. 3199 that call for furnishing information ... in a manner consistent
with the President's constitutional authority ... to withhold information the
disclosure of which could impair foreign relations, national security, the deliberative
processes of the Executive, or the performance of the Executive's constitutional
duties," Bush wrote.
CRP sponsors condemned the signing statement.
"The oversight provisions of the reauthorization bill are an important
safeguard in protecting reader privacy. It is simply outrageous that the President
thinks he can choose the sections of the law he wants to enforce and ignore
the rest," said ABA COO Oren Teicher.
Pat Schroeder,
president and CEO of the Association of American Publishers said, "The
heavy-handed assertion by the White House that it unilaterally decides what
to tell Congress about enforcing the Patriot Act should make members of Congress
mad enough to re-energize the fight to restore basic civil liberties protections.
As far as we're concerned, that fight is far from over."
The Patriot Act reauthorization law contains
several provisions that expand Congressional oversight over how the administration
exercises its expanded police powers.
The new law:
- Requires the Justice Department's Inspector General to conduct an audit
of how the government has used Section 215, which gives the FBI the authority
to search any records that it believes are relevant to a terrorist investigation,
including bookstore and library records;
- Provides for an audit of the way in which the government has used National
Security Letters (NSLs) to search Internet records; and
- Requires the Justice Department to report in April every year the number
of bookstore and library searches under Section 215. These reports are to
be submitted to the House and Senate Committees on the Judiciary, the House
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, and the Senate Select Committee
on Intelligence.
"We call on those Senators who negotiated
the Patriot compromise legislation to hold the Executive Branch accountable
to the American people," said Michael Gorman, president of the American
Library Association. "It is up to the Congress to ensure that every aspect
of the Patriot law as written, including reporting requirements, be enforced."
Saying that the President's signing statement underscored
the administration's contempt for the legislative process, Larry Siems, director
of the Freedom to Write and International Programs at PEN American Center, concluded,
"As a result, I don't think anybody who has been following this issue closely
has any more confidence today that the government is not needlessly monitoring
the lives and activities of law-abiding Americans. We are determined to keep
fighting until that confidence is restored."
The President has issued dozens of signing statements that
raise hundreds of objections to legislation that he has approved. His most controversial
signing statement was released after he signed legislation sponsored by Sen.
John McCain that bans the torture of detainees in U.S. custody. The statement
claimed that the president could legitimately ignore the ban in certain circumstances.
Topics: Free Expression,
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