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Reid to Extend Admin Surveillance Bill till after Early Primaries

Maybe Harry Reid knows how to play this game after all.

Last week, the Senate Democratic leader confused the political world by deciding to put two different versions of a Senate surveillance overhaul up for a floor vote, with the base text being the version despised by civil libertarians. The Solomonic decision pleased no one, and Reid ended up yanking the bill until next month after liberal opposition -- most notably, a filibuster by Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT) -- jeopardized passage of anything.

Reid, however, has to keep his eyes on two calendars. The first calendar has February 1 circled on it. That's the date the Bush administration's broad surveillance measure, known as the Protect America Act, expires. Failure to pass a new bill by that date opens Democrats to the inevitable GOP charge that they're BFF with Osama bin Laden. The second calendar is the primary schedule. As Dodd has demonstrated, placing the surveillance debate in the context of the presidential race makes passing a bill more difficult, as candidates jockey to appease liberal constituencies that passionately oppose the legalization of President Bush's warrantless surveillance program.

So what's left for Reid to do? Punt. Quoth The Hill:

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said Tuesday he would seek to extend a controversial interim wiretapping law through February to avoid the early presidential primary season.

Reid said Senate Democrats might have a better chance of resolving internal disputes and moving a rewrite of the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) once the early primaries have concluded.

The decision makes things dicier for the GOP. Kit Bond, the top Republican on the intelligence committee, told the paper that he opposes a temporary extension of the PAA: "I don't see that it benefits us to continue to delay something that we know we need to do." But if they stick with that line, they'll effectively say that they oppose the administration's chosen legislation, and want the bill to expire.

And they'll also be saying they want to politicize the surveillance fight. That can cut against the Republicans in unexpected ways. What if Mike Huckabee or Ron Paul articulate privacy concerns during Iowa or New Hampshire? The GOP field isn't lockstep on counterterrorism, as McCain or Guiliani's cratering bids have demonstrated. What's more, how will a high-profile insistence by Bush for a new surveillance vote impact the field? After all, in 2006 Bush tried to frame the midterm elections as a referendum on the virtues of warrantless wiretapping. How'd that one turn out for the Republicans, again?

It's by no means certain, but perhaps Reid's on to something here.


Comments (7)

The Man wrote on December 19, 2007 12:35 PM:

After the primarys he will ramp up the pressure

He is a wiley old fox

He'll kick Bush's ass exponentially

Windowdog wrote on December 19, 2007 12:58 PM:

I'm not tracking your analysis at all. They'll just call the Dems lazy obstructionists and demand that the President's bill be renewed. More likely Reid just wants to get out from under all the primary candidate criticism of his actions. Once Dodd is out of the race he loses whatever stump he has, and Clinton/Obama can go back to ignoring the issue.

steambomb wrote on December 19, 2007 1:12 PM:

True that. And in the mean time they still continue to work under a disgraceful protect america act.

dasher wrote on December 19, 2007 1:41 PM:

I agree with Windowdog and steambomb. If this is delayed beyond the early primaries, Dodd & company loose traction.

I absolutely can't understand WHAT the hell kind of game Reid is playing here by favoring the Intell committee bill over the Judiciary bill. I'm so angry at him I could spit!!

It's time to get rid of him and Pelosi, as well as a good portion of the "lesser" (and I do mean lesser) Dem leaders, IMO.

corpus juris wrote on December 19, 2007 2:13 PM:

dasher, it is obvious. Reid is trying hard to bury the illegal activities the Bush administration perpetrated with their warrantless wiretap program. He doesn't want you to find out how much of your communications have been subject to screening.

Joe Buck wrote on December 19, 2007 2:47 PM:

Let's rephrase that. It will be easier for Reid to cave, and to give George Bush everything he wants, after the primaries, because then some senators who don't want to piss off the primary voters will be out of contention and more willing to ignore the base.

Anonymous wrote on December 19, 2007 10:09 PM:

"Spying: It's a Feature not a Bug!" -- The broadbased foreign gov't involvement in this via its corporate proxies is huge. Verizon, AT&T, MCI & Qwest ("telecomm carriers" et al) aren't the only participants. Most of the big players in optical fiber, telecomm equipment manufacturing & IT software (from the OS to the applications layer) must be included in Congress's investigations including BT (British), TeleGlobe (America & Canadian), Hughes systems (satellite, int'l), Qualcomm, Orbital Science & subsidiary OrbComm (Low Earth Orbit satellites + British spy connection), Arinc (Annapolis, MD), Level 3 Communications, Watkins-Johnson (laptop developed to surveill cell phone conversations that was developed ~1993 in Gaithersburg, MD & purchased by the US military & who knows who else), Cisco, Juniper, IBM, Oracle, Monster.com, Google (to China w/ love), Yahoo, MySpace, Lycos, Excite, Seisient, ChoicePoint, Tyco ("home security services") ...

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