AP - The House on Tuesday voted to give two more weeks of life to a law that allows the government more freedom to eavesdrop on suspected terrorists inside the United States, an attempt to buy the logjammed Senate time to pass a bill to replace it. The Senate is ...
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| House extends eavesdropping law AP - The House on Tuesday voted to give two more weeks of life to a law that allows the government more freedom to eavesdrop on suspected terrorists inside the United States, an attempt to buy the logjammed Senate time to pass a bill to replace it. The Senate is also considering extending the surveillance law Congress hastily adopted last August when the White House warned of dangerous gaps in its surveillance authority. Civil rights and privacy advocates say the broadly written law allows the government to eavesdrop on innocent Americans without oversight from a court created for that purpose. The law expires Feb. 1. Senate Republican leaders reversed their opposition to extending the existing law Tuesday, saying they would agree to an extension if the Senate can pass new surveillance legislation this week. That legislation, favored by the White House, includes giving retroactive legal immunity to telecommunications companies that allowed the government to wiretap their customers without court permission. Some 40 civil lawsuits have been filed against telecommunications companies. They carry with them a threat of crippling financial penalties, which the White House says could bankrupt the companies. The House in October passed a version of the bill that does not provide retroactive legal immunity. The Senate Republican offer to extend the current surveillance law was made Monday night. It could break a six-week impasse over an update to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, the 1978 law that dictates when the government needs court approval to conduct electronic surveillance inside the United States. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said Tuesday that Senate Democrats would accept any extension of the current eavesdropping law. "It is a legislative impossibility for us to complete this legislation by Thursday night," said Reid. "If the law expires, it is the direct responsibility of the Republicans." He also said he would try again this week to get the Senate to agree to a 30-day extension. The White House had threatened to veto a proposed 30-day extension of the law, hoping its expiration will pressure Congress into swiftly passing a surveillance bill that includes telecom immunity. The two-week extension, while gaining little if any support at first, was later deemed acceptable by the administration. "While we maintain that Congress has had sufficient time to conclude its work, we have indicated to congressional leaders that we will accommodate this request so that Congress can live up to its commitment to passing a bill that gives the intelligence community the tools they need to protect the nation," White House deputy press secretary Tony Fratto said Tuesday night. "Congress should complete its work before departing for its next break." Bush plans to push for the law in a speech Thursday in Las Vegas. source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080130/ap_on_go_co/terrorist_surveillance [link] | ||||
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