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Senate Vote Clears Way for USA Patriot Act Renewal
March 02, 2006
On
Wednesday, March 1, the Senate voted to clear the way for reauthorization of
the USA Patriot Act, including a four-year extension of Section 215, which authorizes
searches of bookstore and library records. As of press time, the Senate was
expected to vote on reauthorization on Thursday, March 2, and the House is expected
to vote on -- and pass -- the legislation on Tuesday, March 7, as reported by
the Associated Press.
The bill passed on Wednesday was a "compromise" reached in negotiations
between the White House and four Republican senators who were blocking a vote
on extending the Patriot Act because they did not believe the reauthorization
bill contained enough protections for civil liberties. Although ABA, its partners
in the Campaign for Reader Privacy, and other critics of the reauthorization
bill were unhappy because it omitted a provision passed in the Senate that would
have limited Section 215 searches to the records of people suspected of terrorism,
the bill does include a number of provisions that at least partially restore
safeguards for the privacy of bookstore and library records that were eliminated
by the Patriot Act, including the right to challenge Section 215 orders in court.
(For a previous article on this topic, click
here.)
Though President Bush will almost certainly sign the bill by March 10, it does
not mean that further modifications of the Patriot Act are out of the question,
according to AP, which noted that on Tuesday, while urging the Senate
to pass the Act, Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA), chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, stressed that further changes needed to be made to the legislation.
Pointing out that the issue was not yet concluded, Specter said that he is planning
to introduce more legislation and hearings regarding restoring "House-rejected
curbs on government power" at a future date, AP reported. Sen. Russ
Feingold (D-WI), who led the unsuccessful effort to oppose the compromise in
the Senate, also promised to continue the fight to add safeguards for civil
liberties.
Look for further coverage on the Patriot Act reauthorization in next week's
issue of Bookselling This Week.
Topics: News - Bookselling, Free Expression,
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