Monday, September 28, 2009

How Barack Obama Lost Me: FISA

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Of course I voted for him; he was running against some reactionary fossil whose only reason to live is to start a war. And the symbolism inherent in either an Obama or a Clinton win was so overwhelming that it was absolutely predetermined that I would rush to the polls and vote for either of them. But I was never under any illusions than Obama was a progressive. I once was under such an illusion, though. I met him twice when he was an Illinois state senator. I co-hosted fund-raisers for him twice when he was looking to make the jump from state Senator in Springfield renowned for playing poker with cigar chomping state pols to member of the American version of the House of Lords in Washington. He took me in completely. After one speech I tore up a $500 check I had written and doubled down. But that was the last time that happened.

As soon as Obama got to the Senate, I knew something was wrong. It went beyond picking Joe Lieberman as his mentor-- bad enough-- and beyond the fact that he was never-- not ever-- nearly as progressive a voter as Hillary Clinton, something I warned Obamabots about all during the campaign. The fact of the matter is, he was always down near the bottom of the barrel with the putrid likes of said Lieberman, as well as Max Baucus, Blanche Lincoln, Ben Nelson, Tom Carper, Mary Landrieu, Kent Conrad... all the quasi-Democratic dreck seemingly sabotaging his agenda.

During the campaign, Obama said quite a few things that didn't thrill me, not the least of which was his tragic perspective on the occupation of Afghanistan. But there was something that came up during the campaign that clinched it for me-- that made me realize he might be great symbolically but he would likely be another in a long, long line of abysmal political hacks who have gotten into the White House. Hope and Change? Not. A. Chance. During the campaign, the FISA bill came up, along with the issue of retroactive immunity. Thanks to Glenn Greenwald it became an important and much-discussed issue. One thing led to another and Obama vowed to vote against any bill that included retroactive immunity. I guess the polling didn't work because when the bill came up for a vote he broke his pledge and voted for it. I never did ask Glenn if he voted for Obama in November. I did... but knowing full well what to expect.

The Blue America PAC never endorsed Obama and never raised any money for him. Instead we concentrated our efforts on progressives running for the House and Senate. One of our favorite candidates-- favorite in terms of proven commitment to progressive principles was Oregon House Speaker-- now U.S. Senator-- Jeff Merkley. And Senator Merkley has lived up to the promise of his candidacy as he's fought on the right side of every battle since being elected-- from Employee Free Choice to health care reform. So it came as no surprise today when his office sent out a release that he has co-authored legislation with Chris Dodd, Pat Leahy, and Russ Feingold to repeal the retroactive immunity provisions of the FISA Amendments Act. The new legislation seeks to repeal a provision that shields telecommunications companies from legal repercussions if they violate the law; clean and straightforward-- and all-American. Or is it only 76 year old Roman Polanski who has to go to jail for breaking the law?
“During the previous administration, telecommunications companies were granted retroactive immunity for violating the rights and privacy of millions of Americans,” said Merkley. “I am proud to join Senator Dodd and co-sponsor the Retroactive Immunity Repeal Act to help restore accountability and increase oversight to protect the privacy rights that have been central to our nation since its inception.”

The Retroactive Immunity Repeal Act would amend the FISA Amendments Act, which was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Bush in 2008. The controversial legislation included a provision to shield companies from liability for illegally violating their customers’ privacy during the Bush Administration. 

Last week, Senator Merkley also signed on as an original co-sponsor of the Judicious Use of Surveillance Tools in Counterterrorism Efforts (JUSTICE) Act, introduced by Senators Russ Feingold (D-WI) and Richard Durbin (D-IL). The JUSTICE Act would reform the USA Patriot Act, the FISA Amendments Act, and other surveillance authorities to help restore judicial oversight. The legislation would protect the Constitutional rights of American citizens while making sure intelligence and law enforcement agencies still have the tools they need to fight terrorism.

“We must reverse the decisions that allowed our government to intrude into the lives of American citizens. The JUSTICE Act will restore judicial oversight of surveillance activities in order to keep Americans safe while preserving our rights,” said Merkley.

Dodd, who will be doing a live video blogging session on the bill tomorrow (5pm, EST) at My Left Nutmeg, has spoken eloquently about the bill as well: "I believe we best defend America when we also defend its founding principles. We make our nation safer when we eliminate the false choice between liberty and security. But by granting retroactive immunity to the telecommunications companies who may have participated in warrantless wiretapping of American citizens, the Congress violated the protection of our citizen’s privacy and due process right and we must not allow that to stand.” I'm sure Obama will make an eloquent speech about it if he ever gets a chance to sign it. Or maybe he won't.

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Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Did You Get Into The Big AT&T Blue Dog Bash In Denver To Celebrate Retroactive Immunity For Telecom Executives?

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Although one Blue Dog, Pennsylvania's anti-choice, homophobic reactionary Neocon, Chris Carney, says he won't be going to the historic Democratic Convention in Denver that will be nominating Barack Obama-- a man whose policies Carney will spend the rest of his wretched political life fighting-- many other Blue Dogs have indeed shown up in Denver. Sunday night progressive bloggers, Jane Hamsher, John Amato, Glenn Greenwald and Matt Stoller tried to infiltrate the huge bash AT&T threw for Blue Dogs who had taken their bribes and helped Bush push through retroactive immunity for criminal executives from AT&T and other telecom companies who had illegally spied on American citizens. Glenn has a description and video of the bloggers being stonewalled and harassed by the reactionary forces within the Democratic Party and their paid muscle.
Amazingly, not a single one of the 25-30 people we tried to interview would speak to us about who they were, how they got invited, what the party's purpose was, why they were attending, etc. One attendee said he was with an "energy company," and the other confessed she was affiliated with a "trade association," but that was the full extent of their willingness to describe themselves or this event. It was as though they knew they're part of a filthy and deeply corrupt process and were ashamed of -- or at least eager to conceal -- their involvement in it. After just a few minutes, the private security teams demanded that we leave, and when we refused and continued to stand in front trying to interview the reticent attendees, the Denver Police forced us to move further and further away until finally we were unable to approach any more of the arriving guests.

It was really the perfect symbol for how the Beltway political system functions-- those who dictate the nation's laws (the largest corporations and their lobbyists) cavorting in total secrecy with those who are elected to write those laws (members of Congress), while completely prohibiting the public from having any access to and knowledge of-- let alone involvement in-- what they are doing. And all of this was arranged by the corporation-- AT&T-- that is paying for a substantial part of the Democratic National Convention with millions upon millions of dollars, which just received an extraordinary gift of retroactive amnesty from the Congress controlled by that party, whose logo is splattered throughout the city wherever the DNC logo appears-- virtually attached to it-- all taking place next to the stadium where the Democratic presidential nominee, claiming he will cleanse the Beltway of corporate and lobbying influences, will accept the nomination on Thursday night.

AT&T has also given more money to federal elected officials than any other single company in America, $39,502,961 since 1990, most of it to Republicans. So far this year they have "donated" $3,084,061, 59% of it to Republicans. Mostly of the money went to PACs.

Obviously the #1 recipient of AT&T bribes this year has been McCain, but leaving presidential candidates out of this, the biggest targets of their "generosity" in Congress were that fount of corruption, Democratic Party boss Rahm Emanuel (D-IL- $48,950) and "Mr. Retroactive Immunity," Jay Rockefeller (D-WV- $22,000). But right up there with some of the most odious far right Republican stooges, like Mario Diaz-Balart (R-FL- $11,000) and Michael McCaul (R-TX- $10,500) were the Blue Dog scum and fellow travelers who joined the GOP to pass the FISA bill giving immunity from prosecution to the AT&T executives:

Brad Ellsworth (D-IN- $15,000)
Joe Baca (D-CA- $10,000)
Marion Berry (D- AR- $10,000)
Leonard Boswell (D-IA- $10,000)
Lincoln Davis (D-TN- $10,000)
Joe Donnelly (D-IN- $10,000)
Jim Matheson (D-UT- $10,000)
Dennis Moore (D-KS- $10,000)
Zach Space (D-OH- $10,000)
John Tanner (D-TN- $10,000)
Baron Hill (D-IN- $9,750)
Mike Ross (D-AR- $9,250)
Melissa Bean (D-IL- $9,000)
Allen Boyd (D-FL- $9,000)
Charlie Melancon (D-LA- $9,000)
David Scott (D-GA- $9,000)
Heath Shuler (D-NC- $8,450)
John Barrow (D-GA- $8,000)
Artur Davis (D-AL- $8,000)
Jim Cooper (D-TN- $7,500)
Dan Boren (D-OK- $6,500)
Dennis Cardoza (D-CA- $6,000)
Jim Costa (D-CA- $6,000)
Chet Edwards (D-TX- $5,000)
Dan Lipinksi (D-IL- $5,000)
Edolphus Towns (D-NY- $5,000)
Nick Lampson (D-TX- $4,500)
Adam Schiff (D-CA- $3,000)

AT&T was also able to funnel money to Blue Dogs through the Blue Dog PAC which then laundered it out to individual Blue Dogs in $10,000 increments through PACs belonging to members like Melissa Bean, Allen Boyd, Adam Schiff, Marion Berry, Jane Harman, Leonard Boswell, John Tanner, Mike Ross, Earl Pomeroy, David Scott, Dennis Cardoza, etc.

Our blogger colleagues were unable to ascertain which Blue Dogs were availing themselves of AT&T's hospitality (which included a performance by Scottish singer KT Tunstall) in Denver before they were chased away from the entrance. This morning I couldn't get a single congressional office of a single Blue Dog to admit that he or she attended the AT&T Blue Dog celebration in Denver but I did hear from an authoritative source that Allen Boyd, Melissa Bean and John Tanner were at the event. Nor was I able to ascertain whether or not Carney-- who's entire re-election campaign is an outreach to Republicans-- will be in St Paul for the Republican convention.

Since Jane, John, Matt and Glenn missed the party, this is for them-- and for any DWT readers in Denver who didn't get into the AT&T Blue Dog bash Sunday night:

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Sunday, July 20, 2008

Bribery-- The Most Bipartisan Aspect Of Inside The Beltway Political Culture

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We see you

If there's been a theme to DWT in the past couple of weeks, it been an attempt to lay out the clear and debilitating relationship between big corporate bribes-- called "donations" or "contributions" in polite Insider company-- and our political system. Is it really possible to talk about the passage of the FISA bill with retroactive immunity for Telecom executives without talking about the fact that Senator Jay Rockefeller (D-WV-$51,500) and Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D-IL-$49,950), the two members of Congress most responsible for Bush's success in subverting the Constitution and the rule of law, were also the two members of Congress not running for president who got the biggest payoff from those very same Telecom corporate execs who came sleep more soundly now knowing they will never have to stand before the bar of Justice and answer for the crimes they committed?

And in the midst of the worst gasoline crisis most Americans can remember Big Oil demanded that their allies-- our representatives-- kill a proposal to force them to drill for oil on the leased federal lands they now hold or risk losing those leases to companies willing to drill. It may seem rational but Big Oil ad Gas has spent over $200,000,000 on bribing politicians in Washington since 1990, including over $18,000,000 so far this year-- and they expect their shills to jump when they say jump. And who were the biggest recipients of their largess this year? Although John McCain was by far their biggest investment (at over a million dollars so far)-- after all, half his campaign staff makes a living lobbying for Big Oil-- let's skip the presidential candidates and just look at members of Congress. The members who have jumped the highest when Big Oil said jump-- John Cornyn (R-TX-$480,100), James Inhofe (R-OK-$220,350), Steve Pearce (R-NM-$204,234), Mitch McConnell (R-KY-$197,150), and Mary Landrieu (D-LA-$184,850)-- were the #1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 biggest non-presidential Oil and Gas bribe takers in Congress. It's hard to think of it as mere coincidence and not recognize the cause and effect relationship. Congressman X gets X dollars from X Oil, Inc and does the bidding of X Oil, Inc. But don't just take my word for it. This month Thomas Frank has an insightful piece in Harper's, The Wrecking Crew: How a gang of right-wing con men destroyed Washington and made a killing, based on his new book, The Wrecking Crew: How Conservatives Rule.

Operative word is "and." Right wing con men weren't just bumbling idiots; they were out to rip of the system and make generational wealth so that Bushes and Cheneys 100 years from now will be sitting pretty-- with plenty of bottled water when they rest of us are grappling with water poisoned by mercury. Where there is incompetence in government, it was incompetence by direction. Franks first sentence sets the tenor that will be the hallmark of every serious examination of the Bush years: "Corruption is uniquely reprehensible in a democracy because it violates the system's first principle, which we all learned back in the sunshiny days of elementary school: that the government exists to serve the public, not particular individuals."

It is no coincidence that George Bush and John McCain have made a ritual out of nonstop bragging-- as though this would inoculate them-- about what inattentive students they always were and how they failed their courses and were always at the bottoms of their classes. That two dunces, who never learned the lessons that taught the foundations of democracy should be elevated to leadership roles predicts certain results.

Frank very ably points out that Jack Abramoff, in prison until Bush pardons him, was hardly the one bad apple, who, having been plucked and removed from society, is proof positive that corruption has been defeated and is no longer a threat. Quite the contrary. The Tom DeLay-Jack Abramoff Culture of Corruption has been usurped in its entirety by Steny Hoyer and Rahm Emanuel under the accepted Beltway premise that to the victors go the spoils, the "spoils," being access to the pockets of the taxpayers.

Since 1990 the Telecoms spent over $112,000,000 bribing members of Congress, most of their money going to Republicans. But once the Democrats took over both houses of Congress, it would be hardly effective to just shovel more bribes at John McCain (R-AZ), Ted Stevens (R-AK), Susan Collins (R-ME), Gordon Smith (R-OR), and Lindsey Graham (R-OR) in the Senate and Lee Terry (R-NE), Greg Walden (R-OR), Cliff Stearns (R-FL), Eric Cantor (R-VA) and Chris Cannon (R-UT) in the House. They had to reach across the aisle and find Democrats as sleazy and corruptible as Republicans. They didn't have to look far because soon enough Rep. Rahm Emanuel and Senator Jay Rockefeller came knocking on their doors, or on their lobbyists' doors. Now House Democrats who supported the FISA bill-- Emanuel, Rick Boucher (D-VA), Baron Hill (D-IN), Zach Space (R-OH) and Leonard Boswell (D-IA) have raked in more money than the top 5 pro-FISA Republicans. And now-- leaving out McCain's $365,955 pay-off and the bribes to the other presidential candidates-- the 5 biggest Democratic Telecom shills in the Senate got almost the same in bribes that the 5 biggest Republican senatorial shills got. Now that's bipartisanship Inside-the-Beltway style! Frank:
There is so much money in conservatism these days that Karl Rove rightly boasts, "We can now go to students at Harvard and say, 'There is now a secure retirement plan for Republican operatives.'"

The Republican wing of the Democratic Party isn't faring that badly either, Emanuel, the most systemically corrupt Democrat in Congress being Exhibit 1. Still, above and beyond the will to power and personal avarice, there is still a fundamental difference between the "law of the jungle" Republican Party and the "we're all on this boat together" Democrats. Personal failings aside, the combining of Big Government with Big Business (think Italy of the 1920s and Germany and Spain of the 1930s) has enriched a very small but very driven and powerful segment of the population-- and that segment finances the careers of our political class. It is not in the best interests of that segment for government to function well and the GOP has been willing handmaidens in giving them their way.

Fantastic misgovernment is not an accident; nor is it the work of a few bad individuals. It is the consequence of triumph by a particular philosophy of government, by a movement that understands the liberal state as a perversion and considers the market the ideal nexus of human society... Its leaders laugh off the idea of the public interest as airy-fairy nonsense; they caution against bringing top-notch talent into government service; they declare war on public workers... The ruination they have wrought has been thorough; it has been a professional job.

In fact the destruction of the government has been one of the few real successes-- in terms of goals identified and accomplished-- of the Bush Regime. And Thomas Frank seems certain-- as does Frank Rich-- that McCain and the people around him and determined to continue down the same disastrous path. They do not feel our pain. Just ask Phil Gramm what he thinks about the recession and why he thinks Americans are whiners. He may not speak for McCain but McCain speaks for Phil Gramm. Frank: "Like Bush and Reagan before him, John McCain is a self-proclaimed outsider, but should he win in November he will merely bring us more of the same: an executive branch fed by, if not actually made up of, lobbyists and other angry, righteous profiteers."

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Sunday, July 13, 2008

Is Corruption In Afghanistan Somehow Worse Than Corruption in Washington, DC?

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Last week Bush signed a heinous piece of legislation that gives the Executive Branch unimaginable powers to spy on American citizens. It's straight out of Orwell's 1984, Nazi Germany or Stalin's Russia, except it happened in the United States and enough Democrats joined the Republican Party to pass something that would make every patriotic American puke. One giant step towards fascism.

Friday night Air America's Peter B. Collins asked me to explain why so many members of Congress voted for this travesty. The simple, one-word explanation I told his audience: Bribery. Rampant, uncontrollable, unregulated corruption has so inundated our political system that the public takes for granted that most of our political class-- every single Republican without exception plus the whole Republican wing of the Democratic Party-- is unafraid to utterly sell out the Constitution and our liberties for a handful of cash.

The management of the big telecoms were frantic to make sure Congress acceded to Bush's vow to grant them-- the management of the big telecoms-- retroactive immunity for the laws they clearly broke in massive spying on the American public. So far this year they have laid out at least $6,249,940 in "donations" to political campaigns to make sure that happened. The two most guilty telecoms, AT&T and Verizon, handed out $3,017,654 and $1,443,344 (respectively) alone. And who was the biggest recipient? John McCain, of course, the most corrupt politician in America. They gave him $365,955. Obama symbolically voted against retroactive immunity in a doomed amendment by Chris Dodd but once that lost, he went on to vote for the bill (and feel dandy about the $220,789 in donations his "clean" campaign took in. So how, exactly, does his campaign differ from the criminal lobbyist filth that makes up John McCain For President?

But forget the presidential candidates for a moment. Who were the biggest recipients of bribes from the telecoms-- and no sane person could define these pay-offs as anything but bribes-- this year? First and foremost, the man who guided the bill through the Senate and made sure there were enough Democrats joining the GOP to guarantee passage and guarantee that Dodd's amendment would fail: Jay Rockefeller (D-WV-$51,500) and the man who guided the bill through the House and made sure there were enough Democrats joining the GOP to guarantee passage: Rahm Emanuel (D-IL-$49,950). After that came the regular suspects, a veritable hall of shame of corrupt political hacks from both parties who are always willing to sell their votes to corporate interests regardless of the detrimental effects it has on the constituents who theoretically employ them (but don't pay close attention). The worst of the worst (and keep in mind this is just this year's haul):

Ted Stevens (R-AK-$41,400)
Rick Boucher (D-VA-$36,700)
Terry Lee (R-NE-$36,650)
Susan Collins (R-ME-$35,850)
Greg Walden (R-OR-$34,000)
Mark Pryor (D-AR-$32,350)
Cliff Stearns (R-FL-$31,000)
Eric Cantor (R-VA-$30,200)
Baron Hill (D-IN-$28,900)
Max Baucus (D-MT-$28,000)
Gordon Smith (R-OR-$27,750)
Lindsey Graham (R-SC-$26,700)
Roger Wicker (R-MS-$26,600)
Chris Cannon (R-UT-$26,250)
Nathan Deal (R-GA-$25,000)
John Sununu (R-NH-$24,600)
Zach Space (D-OH-$22,000)
Ed Whitfield (R-KY-$21,500)
Bart Stupak (D-MI-$20,800)
Leonard Boswell (D-IA-$20,750)
Mitch McConnell (R-KY-$20,250)

All of these corrupt politicians accepted large donations from the telecoms and then voted, in an obviously unconstitutional manner to grant retroactive immunity to the very people who authorized the pay-offs. Why am I mentioning this today. Well, the L.A. times has a story about Admiral Mike Mullen bitching about corruption in Afghanistan. I spent a couple years when I was younger living in Asia, quite a bit of it in Afghanistan. It is easy to define their social system as corrupt. I drove from Turkey to India and one word never changed: baksheesh. It could be as benign as a tip or as insidious as the police bribe I had to pay to get out of prison when the police found 50 kilos of the finest Mazar-i-Sharif hashish in my van. It's not nearly as insidious as Senator Susan Collins accepting $35,850 from the big telecoms in return for voting to let their chief executives off the hook for spying on the American people without lawful warrants. Many telecom companies were asked and told the Bush Regime their request was illegal and refused to go along. They didn't participate in the gigantic pay-offs to politicians like Susan Collins this year.
Afghan police, Mullen said, "have a history of corruption, and they've had challenges with this in every local area and district. Up until now, they haven't been trained very well, and so we start with a significant deficit, and it's going to take some time to catch up."

Mullen is known for straight talk.

I'll believe that when he has some straight talk with John McCain (R-AZ-$365,955), Barack Obama (D-IL-$220,789), Jay Rockefeller (D-WV-$51,500), Rahm Emanuel (D-IL-$49,950), and Ted Stevens (R-AK-$41,400).

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Thursday, July 10, 2008

SAYING THANK YOU TO REAL AMERICAN PATRIOTS WHO STOOD UP FOR US

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Yesterday the Blue America PAC started running a series of full page newspaper ads in GA-12, alerting John Barrow's constituents that although he campaigns as a Democrat in Savannah, Vidalia, Augusta, Milledgeville, and Statesboro, when he's back Inside the Beltway, he's been the single most dependable Democrat for George Bush and Dick Cheney and for the big money corporations looking for money-grubbing congressmen who will vote for their special interests. The week before that, the Blue America PAC took out a full page ad in the Washington Post and in every newspaper in Steny Hoyer's Maryland district, making sure his constituents knew about his shameful and decisive role in getting Bush's anti-constitutional FISA bill passed.

But over the last few days the Blue America bloggers, Digby, Jane, John and myself-- plus our colleague Glenn-- were mightily impressed by the courageous battle some members of the House and Senate and some candidates for the House and Senate, have waged against overwhelming odds and a sense of gruesome Insider inevitability. We decided that on behalf of the 5,969 donors who contributed $345,395.81 in the last few weeks we would pick a dozen and make symbolic contributions as tokens of gratitude to their campaign funds.

The first names to pop up, of course, where Chris Dodd and Russ Feingold, the heart, soul and conscience of the Senate. Listen to Chris Dodd make his last ditch plea to the Senate yesterday. And take a look at excerpts from Russ Feingold's speech:
“…it could not be clearer that this program broke the law, and this President broke the law. Not only that, but this administration affirmatively misled Congress and the American people about it for years before it finally became public.”

“If Congress short-circuits these lawsuits, we will have lost a prime opportunity to finally achieve accountability for these years of law-breaking. That’s why the administration has been fighting so hard for this immunity. It knows that the cases that have been brought directly against the government face much more difficult procedural barriers, and are unlikely to result in rulings on the merits.”

“I sit on the Intelligence and Judiciary Committees, and I am one of the few members of this body who has been fully briefed on the warrantless wiretapping program. And, based on what I know, I can promise that if more information is declassified about the program in the future, as is likely to happen either due to the Inspector General report, the election of a new President, or simply the passage of time, members of this body will regret that we passed this legislation. I am also familiar with the collection activities that have been conducted under the Protect America Act and will continue under this bill. I invite any of my colleagues who wish to know more about those activities to come speak to me in a classified setting. Publicly, all I can say is that I have serious concerns about how those activities may have impacted the civil liberties of Americans. If we grant these new powers to the government and the effects become known to the American people, we will realize what a mistake it was, of that I am sure.”

Those two were the easy ones because they were on the front line of the Senate every step of the way. It took us hours of e-mails and phone conversations to come up with the other 8, not because there weren't eight worthy progressives and patriots but because there dozens of them. It was painful narrowing them list down to just 8. Let me run down the list and give you a bit of rationale for each:

Rep. Tom Allen (D-ME) was elected to the House on the same day that Susan Collins was first elected to the Senate. Collins, a reflexive Bush rubber stamp, was a big booster of warrantless wiretaps and retroactive immunity. We don't think it's a coincidence that only 2 senators not running for president received bigger donations from the telecoms than Collins. In 2008, her campaign chest has swelled by over $35,000 with telecom money while she was working diligently to grant them everything they wanted. (She's taken $87,621 from them since being elected.) Tom voted against warrantless wiretaps and against retroactive immunity despite pressure from powerful Democratic Party hacks Steny Hoyer and Rahm Emanuel. Tom didn't care about the telecoms contributions or about party leaders manipulations. He stood for principles that cannot be compromised. "I strongly oppose retroactive immunity for telecommunications companies," he told us. "Neither the government nor large corporations are above the law. Individuals and corporations that break the law must be held accountable." Bingo.

Rep. Tom Udall (D-NM) has a somewhat similar story. He's running for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Pete Domenici, who voted in favor of wiretapping U.S. citizens. Worse yet, the right-wing extremist Tom must face in November, Congressman Steve Pearce, is equating giving his corporate donors immunity from Justice with national security. Although Tom's Colorado cousin, Mark Udall, buckled under right-wing pressure, Tom stood firm. This is what he had to say on June 20th when the House voted:
The FISA bill we considered today would compromise the constitutionally guaranteed rights that make America a beacon of hope around the world.

Today's vote was not easy. I stood up to leaders of my own party and voted against this bill, because I took an oath to defend Americans and That duty is most important when it is most difficult. We can protect our nation while upholding our values, but unfortunately, this bill falls short.

Rep. Carol Shea-Porter (D-NH) has fought to protect the constitution and to respect the traditional New Hampshire motto: "Live Free Or Die." In her state people don't give up hard-won liberties for some tinpot would-be tyrant. Her opponent, a rubber stamp zombie she beat in 2006, is trying to make a comeback and is beating up on her by claiming her defense of the Constitution was... unpatriotic. She's fighting back... proudly and unapologetically. This is part of what she wrote in the Union Leader two weeks ago:
The foundation of democracy is individual freedom from government interference. I am willing to compromise on many issues-- but not on the Constitution. Being forced to choose between protecting our national security or protecting our Constitution is a false choice; we do not have to sacrifice one for the other. It is our responsibility as Americans to protect both.

Doug Tudor isn't in office. He's running against the third ranking Republican in the House, central Florida ideologue and extremist Adam Putnam. Doug is a 20 year Navy veteran and he takes the Constitution for which he fought and risked his life very seriously. His comments about the FISA battle were jarring for their straightforward, no holds barred directness:
“On five occasions during my Navy career, I raised my hand and affirmed ‘to protect and defend the Constitution against all enemies foreign and domestic.’ Members of Congress take a similar oath. I believe that those members who voted in favor of HR 6304 did so in violation of their oath of office. I would have voted against this bill.”

Needless to say, Putnam was jumping up and down and eager as a little redheaded beaver for the warrantless wiretaps to be made legal for his campaign contributors in the telecom industry to have their minds set to rest that they would never have to answer for any crimes they may have committed.

Dennis Shulman is a blind rabbi in northern New Jersey running for a House seat currently occupied by the last radical right Republican left in the Northeast United States, Scott Garrett, who has taken over $9,000 from the Telecom industry this year and, of course, is gung-ho for wiretapping Americans. Dennis spent a great deal of time thinking this issue through. Here's what he told us:
"The House of Representatives, with the support of Republican Scott Garrett, recently passed a bill that would grant President Bush and future administrations unprecedented powers to spy on American citizens without a warrant or review by any judge or court. The new law would also let our nation's largest telecom companies off the hook for knowingly violating the law and releasing their customers' private information at the behest of George Bush.

"Our constitutional right to protection against unsupervised searches was written into our Bill of Rights for good reason by Founders whom we rightly celebrate.

"Neither President Bush nor Scott Garrett are as wise as James Madison.

"It is unfortunate that it appears that the telecom industry has managed to falsely conflate its quest for retroactive immunity for lawbreaking with the issue of national security. The Founding Fathers understood that our safety as a nation depended on our being a nation of laws. Retroactive immunity undermines the rule of law, and therefore undermines our principles and security as a nation.

"The President, his advisers, and his rubber stamps in Congress, including Scott Garrett, have demonstrated a pattern of disregard for the laws of the United States. This bill not only immunizes telecom companies from lawsuits, but it would also block the American people from ever knowing the full extent of the Bush Administration's illegal behavior.

"I urge my fellow Democrats in the Senate to vote against this unnecessary and deeply troubling law.

"I believe that Congress must protect the rights of citizens and the laws of our country from career politicians in Washington too willing to cave to special interests and endanger the fundamental rights that we, as Americans, hold so dear."

State Senator Andrew Rice (D-OK) is running a strong campaign against one of the most extremist members of the U.S. Senate, James Inhofe, who raked in $12,550 from the Telecoms this year and was determined to grant them retroactive immunity-- and positively giddy about giving the government the right to listen in to all phone conversations and read all e-mails without a court order. Andrew disagrees-- strongly:
“Congress must remain vigilant in order to protect Americans from another terrorist attack. However, the bill that is before Congress this week bargains away the privacy of law-abiding American citizens while protecting the companies that allegedly participated in the President’s illegal wiretapping program. The Senate should stick to the narrow fix it set out to accomplish by making it clear that the government does not have to obtain a warrant to listen to foreign-to-foreign communications. Instead, this bill allows a significant expansion of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act so that government can eavesdrop on the international communications of innocent American citizens. Since losing my brother on 9/11, I have vowed to improve America’s anti-terrorism capability without sacrificing the freedoms that so many Americans have died to protect.”

Rick Noriega is running in that big ole state just south of Oklahoma. His opponent, rubber stamp corporate shill John Cornyn has taken $15,250 from the Telecom industry this year and he is as eager as Inhofe to grant them retroactive immunity. Rick has thought about the issue more seriously and from a different perspective than just helping out campaign contributors.
“Many times throughout my lifetime I have sworn an oath to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States . This isn’t a part-time Constitution. We as a nation cannot grant anyone sweeping amnesty if they break the rules. It’s appalling that my opponent, John Cornyn, puts his special interest campaign contributors ahead of the Constitution. Texans have had enough.

Americans will not accept an abuse of power, and they will not accept corporations getting away with breaking the law.

We already have a law in place that balances national security concerns while adhering to the Constitution. This is not the time to compromise the privacy of the American people and not the time to disregard the Constitution of United States. I regret that the Senate has voted this way.”

Jim Himes is standing firmly with his state's senior senator, Chris Dodd on this issue. Fake moderate Chris Shayes is once again eager to rubber stamp the Bush-Cheney agenda, somehow trying to say that granting Bush the ability to wiretap all American citizens without a court order makes us "safe." Jim sees right through that craven, partisan posturing:
"In Congress, I will always stand up for the fundamental American belief that no man, and no corporation, is above the law. As always, this is a matter for the courts to decide-- not for Congress, and absolutely not for the same Bush Administration who may have violated the law in the first place. It is great to see so many American citizens of all backgrounds coming together to stand up for the rule of law and in opposition to retroactive immunity for telecommunications companies who may have illegally spied on American citizens at the Bush Administration's request. I am disappointed that Chris Shays and so many others continue to stand with President Bush by refusing to stand up for this most fundamental of American principles."

Jon Tester (D-MT) was a populist underdog who ran for the Senate in 2006 against an Insider Democrat backed by Chuck Schumer and the Beltway Establishment. He beat him in the primary, beat an entrenched Republican incumbent in November and has gone on to represent the interests of regular Montana folks in DC. His statement about the this fight was an inspiration and may well have influenced his Montana colleague: "It deals with the freedoms that so many people have fought and died for. If we want to get serious about the War on Terror, we need to make the investments to fight the war on terror. We ought not be taking rights away from honest citizens. If we've got terror cells around the world, then let's invest in human intelligence. Let's invest in our Special Forces. Let's go after 'em, and let's be serious, and not get sidetracked by Iraq. Right now, we're taking rights away from honest people. If they think you fall into their list, you're a target. By the time they figure out there's a terror cell, they can get a warrant.... The government ought not be taking away our freedoms."

Darcy Burner is running against a corporate hack and rubber stamp in Washington, Dave Reichert, who is all about rewarding his corporate donors with retroactive immunity. Reichert took $6,000 for the Telecoms so far this year and thinks they should not be accountable for crimes they may have committed. Darcy has been one of the most outspoken opponents of this bill; watch the 30 second video. After the bill passed in the House, she didn't despair; she start rallying for action:
Like many of you, I'm incredibly disappointed with today's vote on retroactive immunity for the telecommunications companies. I've made my position on this issue very clear, and I've been happy to be fighting to ensure that we uphold the Constitution through all of this. But the real question is what we do going forward. We need to make sure that we elect people to Congress who are going to defend the Constitution at the same time that the keep this country safe. I promise you, I will never let you down on that. It's time for us to elect more and better Democrats.

We're less concerned about the "more" and focussing on the "better." We will send each of these patriotic Americans a grassroots contribution for $1,000. If you haven't donated yet and would like to, please feel free-- right here. Let me leave you with a final thought from Senator Dodd. He's talking about you:
Lastly, I want to thank the thousands who joined with us in this fight around the country - those who took to the blogs, gathered signatures for online petitions and created a movement behind this issue. Men and women, young and old, who stood up, spoke out and gave us the strength to carry on this fight. Not one of them had to be involved, but each choose to become involved for one reason and one reason alone: Because they love their country. They remind us that the "silent encroachments of those in power" Madison spoke of can, in fact, be heard, if only we listen.



UPDATE: RUSS FEINGOLD ASKED US TO REDIRECT HIS CHECK

Senator Feingold isn't running for re-election in 2008. He was pleased that we're recognizing his service to the country and he asked us to send the $1,000 check to the Patriot Corps. He's been saying for years that a strong grassroots field program is the key to electoral victory. That's why his Progressive Patriots Fund created the Patriot Corps in 2006-- a way to support progressive candidates nationwide. In the lead-up to the 2008 election, the Progressive Patriots Fund will again be hiring, training and sending field staff to key races across the country. 

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Wednesday, July 09, 2008

HOW MUCH DOES A SENATOR CHARGE TO SELL OUT THE CONSTITUTION?

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Chris Dodd's amendment to strip retroactive immunity for criminal telecom companies from the FISA bill failed 32-66. Not a single Republican stood up for the Constitution or the rule of law-- and enough Democrats were bribed by the telecom companies to hand Bush the victory he lusted for. Glenn Greenwald has excellent coverage of the minute to minute goings-on on the floor of the Senate today.

I'd like to salute the members of the Senate who courageously stood for the Constitution today:

Dan Akaka (D-HI)
Max Baucus (D-MT)
Joe Biden (D-DE)
Jeff Bingamon (D-NM)
Barbara Boxer (D-CA)
Sherrod Brown (D-OH)
Robert Byrd (D-WV)
Maria Cantwell (D-WA)
Ben Cardin (D-MD)
Robert Casey (D-PA)
Hillary Clinton (D-NY)
Chris Dodd (D-CT)
Byron Dorgan (D-ND)
Dick Durbin (D-IL)
Russ Feingold (D-WI)
Tom Harkin (D-IA)
John Kerry (D-MA)
Amy Klobuchar (D-MN)
Frank Lautenburg (D-NJ)
Pat Leahy (D-VT)
Carl Levin (D-MI)
Robert Menendez (D-NJ)
Patty Murray (D-WA)
Barack Obama (D-IL)
Jack Reed (D-RI)
Harry Reid (D-NV)
Bernie Sanders (I-VT)
Chuck Shumer (D-NY)
Debbie Stabenow (D-MI)
Jon Tester (D-MT)
Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI)
Ron Wyden (D-OR)

I don't want to list all of the members of the Senate who voted with Bush to curtail American liberties today. But I will list the names of the worst ones. The figure next to their names is the amount of bribes they have received this year from the telecom companies whose special interests they put before their duty to the Constitution and to their own constituents. As you read the list please keep in mind what 20 year Navy vet and Democratic candidate running against GOP rubber stamp Adam Putnam, Doug Tudor told us yesterday:
“On five occasions during my Navy career, I raised my hand and affirmed ‘to protect and defend the Constitution against all enemies foreign and domestic.’ Members of Congress take a similar oath. I believe that those members who voted in favor of HR 6304 did so in violation of their oath of office. I would have voted against this bill.”


Lamar Alexander (R-TN- $11,500)
Evan Bayh (D-IN- ?)
Tom Carper (D-DE- $1,000)
Saxby Chambliss (R-GA- $13,800)
Thad Cochran (R-MS- $6,500)
Norm Coleman (R-MN- $7,700)
Susan Collins (R-ME- $35,850)
John Cornyn (R-TX- $15,250)
Elizabeth Dole (R-NC- $11,360)
Dianne Feinstein (D-CA- ?)
Lindsey Graham (R-SC- $26,700)
James Inhofe (R-OK- $12,550)
Tom Johnson (D-SD- $9,750)
Mary Landrieu (D-LA- $15,750)
Joe Lieberman (R-CT- ?)
Claire McCaskill (D-MO- $9,000)
Mitch McConnell (R-KY- $20,250)
Barbara Mikulski (D-MD- $6,000)
Ben Nelson (D-NE- ?)
Bill Nelson (D-FL- $4,000)
Mark Pryor (D-AR- $32,350)
Jay Rockefeller (D-WV- $51,500)
Pat Roberts (R-KS- $14,250)
Gordon Smith (R-OR- $27,750)
Ted Stevens (R-AK- $41,400)
John Sununu (R-NH- $24,600)
John Thune (R-SD- $7,000)
Roger Wicker (R-MS- $26,600)

McCain didn't bother showing up to vote but this year he accepted bigger bribes from the Telecoms than any other member of the Senate or House, $365,955.

Jane, John, Digby, Glenn and I want to make some donations from Blue America to the heroes of this battle. We'd like to get some suggestions for who you think we should include.


UPDATE: HILLARY CLINTON DOES THE RIGHT THING

It's worth reading Hillary's statement on why she voted for Dodd's amendment to strip retroactive immunity from the bill and then voted against the bill when Dodd's amendment failed. I wish Obama had done the same.
One of the great challenges before us as a nation is remaining steadfast in our fight against terrorism while preserving our commitment to the rule of law and individual liberty. As a senator from New York on September 11, I understand the importance of taking any and all necessary steps to protect our nation from those who would do us harm. I believe strongly that we must modernize our surveillance laws in order to provide intelligence professionals the tools needed to fight terrorism and make our country more secure. However, any surveillance program must contain safeguards to protect the rights of Americans against abuse, and to preserve clear lines of oversight and accountability over this administration. I applaud the efforts of my colleagues who negotiated this legislation, and I respect my colleagues who reached a different conclusion on today's vote. I do so because this is a difficult issue. Nonetheless, I could not vote for the legislation in its current form.

The legislation would overhaul the law that governs the administration's surveillance activities. Some of the legislation's provisions place guidelines and restrictions on the operational details of the surveillance activities, others increase judicial and legislative oversight of those activities, and still others relate to immunity for telecommunications companies that participated in the administration's surveillance activities.

While this legislation does strengthen oversight of the administration's surveillance activities over previous drafts, in many respects, the oversight in the bill continues to come up short. For instance, while the bill nominally calls for increased oversight by the FISA Court, its ability to serve as a meaningful check on the President's power is debatable. The clearest example of this is the limited power given to the FISA Court to review the government's targeting and minimization procedures.

But the legislation has other significant shortcomings. The legislation also makes no meaningful change to the immunity provisions. There is little disagreement that the legislation effectively grants retroactive immunity to the telecommunications companies. In my judgment, immunity under these circumstances has the practical effect of shutting down a critical avenue for holding the administration accountable for its conduct. It is precisely why I have supported efforts in the Senate to strip the bill of these provisions, both today and during previous debates on this subject. Unfortunately, these efforts have been unsuccessful.

What is more, even as we considered this legislation, the administration refused to allow the overwhelming majority of Senators to examine the warrantless wiretapping program. This made it exceedingly difficult for those Senators who are not on the Intelligence and Judiciary Committees to assess the need for the operational details of the legislation, and whether greater protections are necessary. The same can be said for an assessment of the telecom immunity provisions. On an issue of such tremendous importance to our citizens – and in particular to New Yorkers – all Senators should have been entitled to receive briefings that would have enabled them to make an informed decision about the merits of this legislation. I cannot support this legislation when we know neither the nature of the surveillance activities authorized nor the role played by telecommunications companies granted immunity.

Congress must vigorously check and balance the president even in the face of dangerous enemies and at a time of war. That is what sets us apart. And that is what is vital to ensuring that any tool designed to protect us is used – and used within the law – for that purpose and that purpose alone. I believe my responsibility requires that I vote against this compromise, and I will continue to pursue reforms that will improve our ability to collect intelligence in our efforts to combat terror and to oversee that authority in Congress.

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Tuesday, July 08, 2008

FISA BATTLE TAKES FRONT AND CENTER IN CONGRESSIONAL RACES

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Standing up for principle, standing up for America

This morning I spoke to a reporter for the Savannah Morning News, the biggest newspaper in John Barrow's district. He mentioned to me, and he seemed surprised, that Regina Thomas has been making warrantless wiretaps an issue in a race where Regina's own best issues, employment and high gas prices have been front and center. But Regina remembers when the government wiretapped Martin Luther King and she finds it deplorable that the congressman from GA-12 should support Bush doing the same thing to untold millions of American citizens without legal warrants. The same reporter asked Barrow, who has been one of Bush's most dependable allies on this, and Regina about warrantless wiretaps and retroactive immunity in their Savannah debate last night. It was obvious that Barrow-- for all his touting of his Harvard education-- has no understanding of the Constitution, separation of powers or the oath of office he took. Although Regina is just a state Senator, her intuitive understanding of Justice and the respect with which Americans hold the Rule of Law, puts her light years ahead of Mr. Smarty Pants. But Georgia's 12th CD isn't the only race where a progressive facing a reactionary has seen the FISA issue come to the fore.

Every single incumbent on the Blue America list, like the majority of Democrats in the House, voted against the Bush-Hoyer FISA bill. It's becoming an issue as reactionaries try smearing them for defending the Constitution. An excellent example is in New Hampshire, where progressive, grassroots icon Carol Shea-Porter, has been an outspoken defender of the rule of law. She penned an OpEd in the Union Leader explaining the bill and the principles she stood up for when voting against it. Her summation was particularly powerful:
The foundation of democracy is individual freedom from government interference. I am willing to compromise on many issues -- but not on the Constitution. Being forced to choose between protecting our national security or protecting our Constitution is a false choice; we do not have to sacrifice one for the other. It is our responsibility as Americans to protect both.

Jeb Bradley lost his seat to Carol is 2006 because New Hampshire voters recognized him as a Bush yes-man with no opinions of his own. Whatever the special interests wanted, Bradley was there for them. Now as a candidate he was taken $1,200 from the Telecoms and yesterday he wrote his own distorted OpEd for the Union Leader, accusing Carol of being unwilling to stand up for "national security," as though trawling through the phone calls and e-mails of millions of random Americans is related to national security. This is why hacks like Bradley get defeated. People are sick and tired of the lies and distortions and fear-mongering. His partisan summation is less than compelling:
Carol-Shea Porter's vote means she believes it's more important to punish the telecommunications companies that protected us than to assist the intelligence community, which is also trying to protect us. Is this naive or negligent?

Even her own party leadership, which she has been so beholden to in her voting record, disagrees. When your politics are too liberal for Nancy Pelosi, you are definitely too liberal to represent the interests of New Hampshire.

At the same time Bradley was trying to poison the air in New Hampshire with his vicious partisan attacks, Senator Chris Dodd was speaking for most Democrats and most Americans-- although not the ones who get bribed by the Telecoms-- when he wrote that
A brief overview: we learned after September 11, 2001 that giant telecom companies worked with this Administration to compile Americans’ private, domestic communications records into a database of enormous scale and scope. The Bush Administration appears to have convinced those corporations to spy on Americans for five years, in secret and without a warrant.

That we know this happened is not because the government told us-– they say the matter is classified. And it is not because one of the telecoms told us. We may not have known any of this at all were it not for serious investigative journalists. And we wouldn't know how deep the problem really went without an Internet technician by the name of Mark Klein, a 22-year veteran of AT&T who one day at work found a switch that channeled Internet traffic culled from millions of living rooms, bedrooms, kitchens and offices across the nation to a secret room operated by the National Security Agency. Mr. Klein [a cousin of a DWT writer] was old enough to remember when a law was passed to prevent this sort of unchecked spying operation from happening:

FISA-- a law written back in 1978 in the wake of Watergate that ensured the government had both the tools it needed to defend the country and a process in place for judicial review to put checks on
executive authority. Most agree that this law needs to be modernized, as it has been many times over the years. But this time, the President is asking Congress to do something much more: to shield the telecoms from any judicial review of their actions. He wants Congress to declare spying without
a warrant both constitutional and necessary to defend this country.

It is neither.

Not many local papers are paying attention to this crucial, crucial issue. I was heartened to see that the Savannah Morning News is and I noticed that the Connecticut Post in Dodd's home state is as up in arms over this as Dodd is-- and as every patriotic American should be. The Post tries-- though they won't succeed-- to shame Lieberman into supporting Dodd's position-- and to goad Obama into showing us he has some cajones:
For months, Congress has been debating a bill that would legitimize illegal spying on Americans. It remains just as bad an idea today as ever.

...[T]his bill would put to lie the notion, deeply rooted in American history, that this is a nation of laws, and not people. It simply won't do to argue that people or companies can knowingly break the law just because the government said it was allowed. If the suits are baseless, and the companies did not break the law, there is nothing to lose by allowing them to proceed. If there was no lawbreaking, surely these firms can prove that in court. That Congress is pushing for such extreme action as providing retroactive immunity surely implies there were darker motives at work.

Connecticut's Sen. Christopher J. Dodd has led the fight against this bill, and continues to do his constituents proud in this matter. It's too much to hope that his colleague, Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman, would join him, but likely Democratic nominee Barack Obama can make a decisive stand. What is to be lost by standing up for the Constitution? He, more than anyone else, can put an end to this
disaster.

America will never know the extent to which their rights have been violated if those lawsuits are thrown out. And, if this bill passes, the next time anyone talks about such quaint notions as equal
protection under the law, try not to laugh too hard.

Someone who has shown-- over and over-- that he does have cajones, and is willing to put them on the line for important principles. Watch him addressing the Senate on this today:



Another Democratic candidate for Congress, Ashwin Madia (MN-03) is an Iraq War vet who is offended that a bunch of politicians in Washington are getting ready to do violence to the Constitution he has put his life on the line to defend. "I am troubled by the House passage of HR 6304, the FISA Amendments Act of 2008. There is much we can do to prevent terrorism, but such measures do not require the sacrifice of fundamental constitutional freedoms which our country was founded upon. This legislation demonstrates the need for leaders in Congress who have experience in the military and in Iraq, and who value the rule of law as we fight the War on Terror."

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UPRISING IN FLORIDA-- MEET DOUG TUDOR

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Worries congressmen who voted for warrantless wiretaps violated their oaths of office

In November, 2005, it was Arkansas Democrat Marion Berry who famously referred to Florida wingnut Adam Putnam as that "Howdy Doody-looking nimrod." Back then Putnam was working hard to set up the conditions that have led to the economic collapse this country is experiencing now. The bill he was pushing and that Berry was opposing was an attempt to throw "220,000 people off food stamps, allow states to impose new costs on Medicaid beneficiaries, squeeze student lenders and cut education funding, cut aid to state child-support enforcement programs and trim farm supports."

Republicans, particularly his mentor, Tom DeLay, liked Putnam's reactionary ideas and he was brought into their House leadership. Last week he was leading the House Republicans to destroy the U.S. Constitution and arbitrarily moving away from the concept of the rule of law. Nazi Germany didn't go from a democratic republic to a fascist dictatorship in one night. It took many years of hard work by politicians exactly like Adam Putnam to bring that about.

Yesterday, DWT contacted Doug Tudor, a twenty year naval veteran who has decided to challenge Putnam is his central Florida bastion east of Tampa. Formerly a strong Democratic district, dispirited Democrats didn't even bother running a candidate in 2006. Tudor is shaking up politics in Polk County, not by trying to echo Republican talking points but by presenting a clear and powerful alternative, the alternative Americans want to hear. Predictably, the cowardly Democratic Establishment, which prefers Republican-lite candidates, is trying to ignore his grassroots race. Tudor, who traveled to Iraq over 30 times, has been endorsed by Democracy for America. His politics are strongly progressive across the board. He wants to end the war in Iraq. He defends a woman's right to choice. He would never support inequality for any Americans and he supports the equal rights for gay men and women. He knows Bush will never end the war and in his campaign speeches he calls on Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid and Florida Senator Bill Nelson to end the war. I had a feeling he might have something to say about warrantless wiretapping and retroactive immunity. He did:
“On five occasions during my Navy career, I raised my hand and affirmed ‘to protect and defend the Constitution against all enemies foreign and domestic.’ Members of Congress take a similar oath. I believe that those members who voted in favor of HR 6304 did so in violation of their oath of office. I would have voted against this bill.”

Another central Florida Democrat campaigning on a platform of progressive reform, Alan Grayson, is coming from a similar perspective. He is also running against a Bush rubber stamp happy to trade away our liberties for campaign contributions from Telecoms, Ric Keller. (Putnam scooped up $12,500 from the telecoms this year and Keller sold his vote for about half that-- $6,000.) Grayson is confident that Americans are as angered by this betrayal as he is. "If they really want to know what the American People are saying and thinking, there's no need to spy on us. All they have to do is read the newspaper headlines on Nov. 5."

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ANDREA MILLER (D-VA): IN A FREE SOCIETY, THE GOVERNMENT DOES NOT SPY ON ITS CITIZENS

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Count on these 5 and it'll be like living under Stalin

Last night I had dinner with an English friend, an attorney and businessman. He asked me how likely I thought it was that if the economy kept spiraling downward America would turn to a military strongman or a veiled proto-fascist dictatorship. Here? It couldn't happen here... could it? Today the U.S. Senate is debating a FISA bill that certainly sets the stage for exactly that. With it Congress allowing a runaway, powermad executive to usurp powers specifically prohibited it by the Founding Fathers and the U.S. Constitution, powers to invade American citizens' privacy without a court warrant. We have come to expect this from George Bush and his cronies and the rubber stamp Republicans in Congress who have enabled him to do our nation such grievous harm. But Bush and the Republicans couldn't do it alone. They needed some Democrats.

Enter bribe-happy Democratic powermongers Steny Hoyer and Rahm Emanuel, flush with gigantic "contributions" from the big telecoms looking for retroactive immunity for illegally spying on Americans. Hoyer and Emanuel were able to bribe and pressure enough Democrats who are unfit for office to cross the aisle with them and vote with the Republicans. Tomorrow the telecoms' best friend (i.e.- the one, other than presidential candidates, they give the most bribes to ), Jay Rockefeller (D-$51,500 this year alone) will try persuading Democrats in the Senate to do the same thing and vote with Mitch McConnell, John Cornyn, Joe Lieberman and John McCain to neuter another piece of the Constitution. It is nearly a foregone conclusion that Rockefeller will succeed. He's had a lot of grease spread for him by the Telecoms. Here are a list of some of the senators who seem ready to sell us out for the bribes-- and let's face it, ladies and gentlemen, these huge "contributions are bribes-- they have been given by the Telecoms this year alone:

Jay Rockefeller (D-WV)- $51,500
Ted Stevens (R-AK)- $37,900
Susan Collins (R-ME)- $32,850
Mark Pryor (D-AR)- $31,350
Max Baucus (D-MT)- $28,000
Gordon Smith (R-OR)- $26,750
Lindsey Graham (R-SC)- $26,700
Roger Wicker (R-MS)- $26,600
John Sununu (R-NH)- $24,600
Mitch McConnell (R-KY)- $20,250
Mary Landrieu (D-LA)- $15,750
Sam Brownback (R-KS)- $14,200
Pat Roberts (R-KS)- $13,250

We contacted some of the candidates running for Congress against incumbents who voted to rubber stamp this frightening development. John Barrow in Georgia has been one of Bush's closets conspirators among right-wing Democrats. He has bragged how he has supported Bush "every step of the way" in Iraq. And he has been supporting Bush's dismantling of the constitutional protections that Americans cherish. A week from today Barrow-- who accepted $19,500 in bribes from Telecoms this year-- will face a primary challenge from state Senator Regina Thomas. She says she is stunned and outraged that Bush would pull this stunt. She remembers when the FBI illegally wiretapped Rev. Martin Luther King and she is dismayed that her own congressman is cheerleading this. "The concept of retroactive immunity is an affront to the American people. There shouldn't be two classes of Justice in this country, one for wealthy campaign donors and one for the rest of us."

Yesterday we published a statement from Dennis Shulman, whose opponent, right wing crazy Scott Garrett (R-NJ) has accepted $9,000 from the Telecoms this year and was happy to vote in favor of warrantless wiretaps and retroactive immunity. You should hit that link and read Dennis' statement. It's very powerful. So is one we got last night from Andrea Miller, a brilliant educator in Virginia who is running against a garden variety Republican pod who never says no to anything Bush wants, Randy Forbes. Of course it doesn't hurt that Forbes takes bribes right and left from all the corporations with special interests and dealings before Congress. The Telecoms have given him $8,550 this year. Andrea doesn't address his corruption, just the crisis in identity our nation is facing:
"As a teacher, I look at a lot of things from a historical perspective. Can anyone say 'Constitution,' does anyone remember Civics class from elementary school? The House recently passed a FISA bill that is an embarrassment to the concept of freedom and America. In a free society, the government does not spy on its citizens. The United States Constitution was written to create a free society and protect the individual rights of its citizens for all time. We just celebrated Independence Day, American independence from a tyrant's rule. It seems that we have simply exchanged a tyrant from one century for a new set of tyrants in the 21st century. The Constitution was written so that the new American democracy would never grant any individual the power of king. And now the House has decreed that the President is above the law and the President at any time can break any rule and declare that the law does not count. All parties involved in the FISA issue clearly understood that their actions were not allowed under the Constitution-- they simply decided that the Constitution no longer applied to them because they simply chose to ignore it.
 
If we are not a nation of laws, what kind of nation are we? If we break our laws in the name of national security, what kind of security can we have as a nation?"

And if you have any doubt about which way the Insiders-- whether Bush, McCain, the Republican sheep in Congress, or the Republican wing of the Democratic Party-- are taking this country, watch this short video taken yesterday in Denver as a 61 year old librarian, peacefully exercising her express constitutional rights, was harassed and threatened by the police for saying what everyone in America already knows:

McCain = Bush



Had enough?

Goal Thermometer

UPDATE: AND THE FISA BILL IS ACTUALLY WORSE NOW THAT HOYER HAS WORKED HIS MAGIC

Like the Republicans, Hoyer and Emanuel are taking a great deal of money from the Telecoms. They spread this money around to more corrupt members of the Democratic caucus, the easy votes on corporate matters-- like John Barrow and Chris Carney. In any rational discussion, this would be called "bribery," but Congress makes the "rules" that it has to live up to and they carefully redefine bribery to not include this kind of behavior. Hoyer took the lead in working with the Telecoms to make sure they get their money's worth. The resulting "compromise" is even worse than the atrocious bill Jay Rockefeller and Mitch McConnell got them.
The 114-page bill was pushed through the House so quickly that there was no real time to debate its many complex provisions. This may explain why the telecom immunity provision has received so much attention in the media: it is much easier to explain to readers not familiar with the intricacies of surveillance law than the other provisions. But as important as the immunity issue is, the legislation also makes many prospective changes to surveillance law that will profoundly impact our privacy rights for years to come.

Specifically, the new legislation dramatically expands the government's ability to wiretap without meaningful judicial oversight, by redefining "oversight" so that the feds can drag their feet on getting authorization almost indefinitely. It also gives the feds unprecedented new latitude in selecting eavesdropping targets, latitude that could be used to collect information on non-terrorist-related activities like P2P copyright infringement and online gambling. In short, the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 opens up loopholes so large that the feds could drive a truck loaded down with purloined civil liberties through it. So the telecom immunity stuff is just the smoke; let's take a look at the fire.

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Monday, July 07, 2008

YOUR BLUE AMERICA DOLLARS AT WORK-- TRYING TO SAVE THE CONSTITUTION

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Very few issues have touched the readers of DWT with a greater sense of urgency than the debate over warrantless wiretaps and retroactive immunity (FISA). Basically it is a debate over whether we are a nation ruled by laws or by men. Together with the other Blue America bloggers at Crooks & Liars, Firedoglake, Digby's Hullabaloo and Salon (Glenn), we were able to reach enough concerned citizens to raise over $340,000 in the last couple of weeks. Today I opened a letter from Barbara in Schenectady, New York. I didn't know if I should cry or cheer. In either case, I felt a sense of pride for my connection with Barbara:
"Enclosed is my personal check for $25.00 to support the FISA campaign. These are my personal funds. I am a secretary, currently unemployed.

Almost 6,000 people have donated so far and we have run TV, radio, and newspaper ads in Chris Carney's Pennsylvania district, newspaper ads and patch-thru calls explaining to Steny Hoyer's constituents (and colleagues) his odious role in this massive betrayal of Democracy. Tomorrow we are running the following full page ad in the Washington Post and the day after we will explain our efforts to hold John Barrow (GA-12) accountable for his outrageously anti-American votes.

Click on the ad to read it


One of the most inspiring Blue America candidates, Dennis Shulman from northern New Jersey is running for Congress against the last of the far right extremists in the Northeast United States, Scott Garrett. Garrett, of course, is an enthusiastic supporter of warrantless wiretaps against Americans and loves the idea of retroactive immunity for his campaign donors. Dennis sent us this statement today:
"The House of Representatives, with the support of Republican Scott Garrett, recently passed a bill that would grant President Bush and future administrations unprecedented powers to spy on American citizens without a warrant or review by any judge or court. The new law would also let our nation's largest telecom companies off the hook for knowingly violating the law and releasing their customers' private information at the behest of George Bush.

"Our constitutional right to protection against unsupervised searches was written into our Bill of Rights for good reason by Founders whom we rightly celebrate.

"Neither President Bush nor Scott Garrett are as wise as James Madison.

"It is unfortunate that it appears that the telecom industry has managed to falsely conflate its quest for retroactive immunity for lawbreaking with the issue of national security. The Founding Fathers understood that our safety as a nation depended on our being a nation of laws. Retroactive immunity undermines the rule of law, and therefore undermines our principles and security as a nation.

"The President, his advisers, and his rubber stamps in Congress, including Scott Garrett, have demonstrated a pattern of disregard for the laws of the United States. This bill not only immunizes telecom companies from lawsuits, but it would also block the American people from ever knowing the full extent of the Bush Administration's illegal behavior.

"I urge my fellow Democrats in the Senate to vote against this unnecessary and deeply troubling law.

"I believe that Congress must protect the rights of citizens and the laws of our country from career politicians in Washington too willing to cave to special interests and endanger the fundamental rights that we, as Americans, hold so dear."

Wednesday the Senate votes. Chris Dodd, Russ Feingold, Ron Wyden, Ben Cardin are leading the uphill battle to defeat this bill. You have two senators; consider calling them and telling them this is a line in the sand and that you won't vote for them if they vote to chip away at the Constitution. It's easy; use this tool your Blue America dollars paid to develop:

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Wednesday, July 02, 2008

IS THERE A SECERT CONSPIRACY AT THE HEART OF THE TWO PARTIES' ESTABLISHMENT? WELL... IT'S NOT THAT SECRET

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One of the things I like about long plane rides-- one of the only things these days in fact-- is that I get a chance to read without interruption. I pretty much finished David Sirota's new book, The Uprising, and found plenty of inspiration I want to share. Let me start with this line from a chapter explaining the Minutemen and other putatively right-wing militias:

"This ideology is partly nationalist and vaguely pitchfork populist; mostly libertarian but also a bit fascist; more comfortable with equal-opportunity xenophobia than targeted racism (though there is some of that); and, above all else, grounded in a belief that both parties' Establishment secretly collude with moneyed interests in a treasonous ploy to oppress regular folks and undermine American sovereignty.

The emphasis is mine and I should point out that David wrote this before the FISA retroactive immunity conundrum proved that this has a lot more to do with cold hard facts than with conspiracy theories about the Trilateral Commission, the NAFTA Superhighway, an al Qaeda mosque on the California side of the Mexican border or other bits and pieces of militia conventional wisdom. In fact, the only word that Sirota should remove from his sentence is "secretly." And that's because the collusion between the 2 heinous parties' Establishment and the corporate powers is anything but secret. Not that the Infotainment branch of U.S. corporate power trumpets it... but it's all out there in plain view.

Let's use the FISA vote as an example of how this works. First take a look at the roll call. Only one Republican voted against retroactive immunity-- 188 voted for it, not enough to pass it; not even close. But then Democratic House caucus leaders Rahm Emanuel and Steny Hoyer come riding to the rescue with 103 other Democrats. 128 Democrats voted no, but their no votes were swamped by the ad hoc coalition of bribed Republicans and the bought-off Hoyer-Emanuel caucus of Blue Dogs, Dixiecrats, right-of-center Democratic cowards who still think they are only electorally safe if they vote for Bush's thoroughly discredited policies. So far this cycle-- so since they poured $7.6 million into congressional races in 2006 (62% of it to Republicans)-- the Telcom companies, who were so desperate for Congress to pass retroactive immunity, have already ante-ed up $5,774,902 (only 55% for Republicans).

And who got the big bucks? Leave aside the presidential candidates for a moment, each of whom got massive "contributions," and look who got the most:
Jay Rockefeller, the chief retroactive immunity watercarrier in the Senate ($51,500)
Rahm Emanuel, who delivered scores of House Democrats and served as the middle man for telecom bribes to Democratic rank-and-file (49,950)

These two sleaze bags, actually got more than any Republicans! And the other House Democrats among the top 20 recipients of Telecom bribe money were-- surprise, surprise-- mostly right-wing, pro-corporate Democrats who routinely carry water for the Telecoms and voted with Bush, Hoyer and Emanuel (and against the majority of Democrats) to grant retroactive immunity to the same Telecoms who have been bribing them! In fact, only 3 (powerful committee chairs Ed Markey, John Dingell and Charles Rangel) voted against Telecom Immunity. The Democrats who took the most, some as much as the Republicans took, and then joined with the Republicans to pass this monstrosity were:

Rick Boucher (VA)- $36,700
Baron Hill (IN)- $26,900
Zach Space (OH)- $22,000
John Barrow (GA)- $19,500
Marion Berry (AR)- $19,500
Mike Ross (AR)- $18,000
John Tanner (TN)- $17,500

It's as clear as day. The Telecoms didn't want their executives going on trial and being forced to testify about the Bush-Cheney secret spying on Americans long before 9/11 so they bribed-- called "contributed" in a definition conveniently set by the recipients themselves-- the GOP and enough sleazy Democrats to prevent the pursuit of justice.

And, although the Telecoms clearly favor John McCain above any other member of the Senate or House ($845,337 for his career and $356,145 this year), remember that they have also given a not insubstantial $205,795 to Barack Obama (who has said he will fight retroactive immunity but has shown no signs whatsoever that he will expend even a dime's worth of political capital on the cause, at least not while he's working out something that apparently is more important to him: his evangelical strategy.)

The political party Establishments have so jiggered the system that none of these conspirators face seven a modicum of accountability inside their gerrymandered districts. Except one: John Barrow is being challenged by state Senator Regina Thomas. He is one of Bush's key backers on retroactive immunity and is one of the biggest recipients of bribes from the Telecoms. Regina adamantly opposes retroactive immunity. They face off in a Davis vs Goliath primary on July 15. It isn't too late to help David vanquish the one vulnerable Blue Dog in the entire Congress. The names are in alphabetical order, so Regina Thomas is towards the bottom of this list of our candidates.

UPDATE: ANOTHER WAY TO FIGHT BACK AGAINST THE BELTWAY CONSPIRACY

Blue America just launched a call tool that will help you let your senators know how you feel about retroactive immunity. They do, after all, work for you and will at least pretend to be interested in your opinion. I guess they decided to wait to further shred the Constitution until after the 4th of July holiday and they are now prepared to put into concrete exactly what Bush has been asking for: two legal systems, one for rich corporate executives who pay huge bribes to politicians of both parties, and one for the rest of us. Christy has the details at FDL-- or just click the magic button below.

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Thursday, June 26, 2008

HOUSE BROKEN BLUE DOGS LOOKING FOR A CAT'S PAW IN THE SENATE

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In the last electoral cycle, the most corrupt of the right-wing Democrats in the House, the Blue Dogs (widely derided as "the Republican wing of the Democratic Party"), only endorsed one Democrat running for the Senate, Harold Ford of Memphis. Ford's was the only high profile race for a Senate seat that the Democrats lost in 2006. And it was an open seat, considered far far easier to take than to beat a sitting incumbent. Populist and progressive Democrats retired Republicans in every other competitive race, ending the miserable political careers of Rick Santorum (R-PA), George Allen (R-VA), Conrad Burns (R-MT), Mike DeWine (R-OH), James Talent (R-MO), the more honorable career of Lincoln Chafee (R-RI) and winning the other heavily contested open seat (in Maryland).

But yesterday's Hill reports that the Blue Dogs, whose bank account is filled with massive corporate bribes from the special interests they are always shilling for, plan to stick their snouts into some Senate races. The reason the Blue Dogs are so well-heeled is because they were among the biggest non-Republican recipients of bribes-- so called "campaign contributions"-- from the telecoms and they forced the retroactive immunity onto the House agenda in return. All 22 Democrats who signed a letter to Speaker Pelosi demanding retroactive immunity are Blue Dogs:
• Marion Berry (AR)- $19,550
• John Barrow (GA)- $19,500
• Leonard Boswell (IA)- $13,750
• Mike Ross (AR)- $18,000
• Earl Pomeroy (ND)- $8,000
• Bud Cramer (AL)- $6,000
• Melissa Bean (IL)- $12,500
• Allen Boyd (FL)- $12,000
• Joe Baca (CA)- $15,100
• John Tanner (TN)- $17,500
• Jim Matheson (UT)- $15,000
• Lincoln Davis (TN)- $15,500
• Brad Ellsworth (IN)- $15,500
• Charlie Melancon (LA)- $13,000
• Dennis Moore (KS)- $14,000
• Zack Space (OH)- $22,000
Dan Boren (OK)- $9,500
Chris Carney (PA)- $5,000
Jim Cooper (TN)- $8,000
Tim Holden (PA)- $5,500
Nick Lampson (TX)- $7,500
Heath Shuler (NC)- $13,200

The bolded names were the most rabid, who refused to go along with Hoyer's promise that he would work out a backroom deal-- which he did-- giving the Telecom campaign contributors immunity. They were the only Democrats to vote with the Republicans for retroactive immunity the first go-round. And the dollar amounts are how much the telecoms have paid off each of these disgraceful, unethical-- if not criminal-- members of Congress. By the way, the biggest telecom payday of all went to Democratic arm twister and slimebucket Rahm Emanuel who took in a hefty $49,950 and who helped Hoyer deliver the votes that were needed to pass retroactive immunity. All the bribe amounts from telecoms to members of Congress are available at OpenSecrets.

The first race the Blue Dogs are talking about jumping in to is in Virginia, a sure win, in which Mark Warner is widely expected to bury Jim Gilmore, a right wing kook. “We’re interested in getting some like-minded people in the Senate,” said John Tanner, a reactionary Democrat who chairs the Blue Dog PAC. Evan Bayh, who isn't facing re-election this year, immediately started jumping up and down, wagging his tail and barking loudly: “Over the years there have been efforts to establish centrist … groups here,” Bayh said. “It’s never been as formal or as lasting as the Blue Dogs, but obviously the more like-minded members that we have-- centrists, pragmatists-- the greater the potential for something like that to occur with me. I’m not interested in joining an organization just to join something, but if there’s actually a potential for practical results? Absolutely. We need more of that around here.”

The Blue Dog PAC primarily raises money for members of the Blue Dog caucus. This year they have also given money to a number of like-minded arch-conservative Democrats who aren't officially members:

Don Cazayoux (LA)- $5,000
Travis Childers (MS)- $20,000
candidate Jill Derby (NV)- $5,000
candidate Christine Jennings (FL)- $5,000

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