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Patriot Act Legislation Headed for Reauthorization
February 16, 2006
On
Thursday, February 16, the U.S. Congress took a major step toward the final
passage of a revised USA Patriot Act. By a vote of 96 - 3 the Senate agreed
to limit debate on the measure, which now is almost certain to be approved by
the House and Senate and signed into law. However, before a final vote, Sen.
Russell Feingold (D-WI) has said that he will "offer several amendments
to strengthen the legislation's curbs on government power," as reported
by the Associated Press.
With Congress set to recess the week of February 20, it now appears that
a vote on the Patriot Act reauthorization conference report will not take place
until the week of February 27. The current version of the Patriot Act is scheduled
to expire on March 10.
On Thursday, February 9, a bipartisan group of senators, led by Sen. Arlen
Specter (R-PA), chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, announced that an
agreement on modifications to the USA Patriot Act's expiring provisions had
been reached. The group included five senators who had previously opposed reauthorization
of the legislation in order to allow time for Congress to fashion a compromise
that would strengthen protections of reader privacy. (For a previous story on
this topic, click here.)
On Tuesday, February 14, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN) brought the
Patriot Act compromise legislation to the floor, a move that spurred some objections
from Democrats, as reported by Congress Daily. The Daily noted
that Feingold, who led the charge in late December to block the Patriot Act,
vowed to "use every procedural hurdle in his arsenal to defeat the bill."
Frist then filed a motion to invoke cloture and limit debate on the report,
according to the Daily.
In his statement on the Senate floor on Thursday morning, Feingold urged his
Senate colleagues to oppose reauthorization until it protects the rights and
freedoms of "law-abiding Americans with no connection to terrorism."
He noted, "The government should not have the kind of broad, intrusive
powers in Section 215."
ABA COO Oren Teicher commented to BTW that "we were disappointed
that some of the provisions of the Senate's original version of the revised
Patriot Act -- which included stronger protections of readers' rights -- were
not incorporated into the final reauthorization bill. However, this version
does make important, and significant, changes to the Patriot Act. Booksellers
and their allies should know that they successfully changed the tone and tenor
of this important national debate." -- David
Grogan
Topics: News - Bookselling, Free Expression,
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