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Patriot Act Extensions Rejected By House In Bipartisan Vote

Patriot Act

JIM ABRAMS   02/ 8/11 10:12 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — The House on Tuesday failed to extend the life of three surveillance tools that are key to the nation's post-Sept. 11 anti-terror law, a slipup for the new Republican leadership that miscalculated the level of opposition.

The House voted 277-148 to keep the three provisions of the USA Patriot Act on the books until Dec. 8. But Republicans brought up the bill under a special expedited procedure requiring a two-thirds majority, and the vote was seven short of reaching that level.

The Republicans, who took over the House last month, lost 26 of their own members, adding to the 122 Democrats who voted against it. Supporters say the three measures are vital to preventing another terrorist attack, but critics say they infringe on civil liberties. They appealed to the antipathy that newer and more conservative Republicans hold for big government invasions of individual privacy.

Earlier on Tuesday, Republicans also pulled a bill from the floor because of dissatisfaction about extending trade benefits for three South American countries while continuing a program that helps retrain Americans who lose their jobs to foreign competition.

The Patriot Act bill would have renewed the authority for court-approved roving wiretaps that permit surveillance on multiple phones. Also addressed was Section 215, the so-called library records provision that gives the FBI court-approved access to "any tangible thing" relevant to a terrorism investigation.

The third deals with the "lone-wolf" provision of a 2004 anti-terror law that permits secret intelligence surveillance of non-U.S. people not known to be affiliated with a specific terrorist organization.

Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., the former Judiciary Committee chairman who authored the 2001 Patriot Act, urged his colleagues to support the extensions, saying they were needed as a stopgap until permanent statutes could be agreed upon.

"The terrorist threat has not subsided and will not expire, and neither should our national security laws," he said.

But Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, said Republican supporters of the tea party movement should show their opposition to big government by joining Democrats in opposing the measure.

"How about the Patriot Act, which has the broadest reach and the deepest reach of government to our daily lives?" he asked.

The defeat means that Republicans may have to bring the bill back to the floor under regular procedures that only require a majority for passage but allow for amendments. Time is of the essence: The three provisions will expire on Feb. 28 if the House and Senate can't agree on how to proceed.

The House had pushed for a nine-month extension to give lawmakers more time to come up with an approach that would give the measures permanent legal status. The Senate is considering longer-range ideas.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., last month introduced legislation that would extend the three provisions through 2013 while improving oversight of intelligence-gathering tools. Leahy would also phase out, at the end of 2013, the use of national security letters, FBI demands for information that do not need a judge's approval.

The Senate also has on its legislative calendar a bill by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., that would reauthorize the three measures through 2013 and a Republican proposal that would make them permanent.

The White House, in a statement, said it did not object to the House bill but "would strongly prefer" extending the provisions to the end of 2013, saying that "provides the necessary certainty and predictability that our nation's intelligence and law enforcement agencies require."

Leahy, who introduced a nearly identical bill last year that the Senate did not take up, said in December that he had received a letter from Attorney General Eric Holder saying that the Justice Department was implementing several oversight and civil liberties measures included in his legislation.

Those included requirements that the government show relevance to an authorized investigation when seeking library or bookseller records, and similarly that the FBI show that information it is seeking with a national security letter is relevant to an investigation.

Michelle Richardson, legislative counsel of the American Civil Liberties Union, said she was "glad to see there is bipartisan opposition to the Patriot Act 10 years later." The ACLU is a strong opponent of the three provisions, saying they lack proper and fundamental privacy safeguards.

____

The bill is H.R. 514.

Online:

Congress: http://thomas.loc.gov

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WASHINGTON — The House on Tuesday failed to extend the life of three surveillance tools that are key to the nation's post-Sept. 11 anti-terror law, a slipup for the new Republican leadership tha...
WASHINGTON — The House on Tuesday failed to extend the life of three surveillance tools that are key to the nation's post-Sept. 11 anti-terror law, a slipup for the new Republican leadership tha...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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Heavy 11:39 AM on 02/09/2011
texasrodeoqueen   1 minute ago (11:33 AM) 641 Fans Become a fan Unfan USA PATRIOT Act: enabling act for the US empire

Dec 15, 2010 ... The  Read More...
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
05:19 AM on 02/12/2011
Still cannot unfurl Old Glory.
01:40 PM on 02/10/2011
You have been fooled into the patriots act, get rid of it. It was fabricated to have the freedom to commit all sorts of crimes. Crimes against humanity, human rights, habeas corpus , torture etc etc. Come back into the world of normal people.
12:36 PM on 02/10/2011
There is nothing "new" about this bi-partisanship.

1. Demo-crats with their special pan-els will youth-a-nize Grannie.
2. Re-pub-licans with their regressive social policies will make her wish she was day-ud.
06:39 AM on 02/10/2011
The Patriot act is a disgrace. It is antidemocratic like nothing bound into law in American history before and it is a crime against our constitution.

There is only one thing that would let me endorse the Patriot Act: the complete and unequivocal surveillance of government officials to be watched, read, and listened to like the pwoplw who WORK FOR US want to open the privacy of their employers to their friends in corporate America.

If the ones who swore to serve us completely open up their lives to US they deserve the trust they need to have us watched, listened to, and observed averey waking second of the day.

But of course they will not do that. Because they never had any intention of protecting us from threats they invent as they go along. They want control and not be controlled by the ones they work for. That comes dangerously close to what our law calls traeson. To swear to serve the people and then do the exact opposite is no less of a crime because they CALIM they do it to protect us. Especially when what they protect us FROM is at least the direct result of their own actions and many times their very own acts. THEY made Saddam and Bin Laden what they are today. THEY armed them and trained them. And it is they who tell us protection from their creations means loss of human rights FOR US.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ramon Moreno
Read below.
03:05 AM on 02/10/2011
Thanks to the mid-term sweep, Obama's patriot act has been repealed.
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68Namvet
Sioux, French, German, Jew, American mutt
12:44 PM on 02/10/2011
Ah - think you mean Bush's Patriot act as he was the creator of the unconstitutional mess.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ramon Moreno
Read below.
01:49 PM on 02/10/2011
I'm just trying some revisionist role-playing. It's kinda kinky.
02:46 AM on 02/10/2011
The headline sounded good,but after a quick glance its just more political pandering. Time always tells the story.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Silverwolf72
Are We There Yet?
02:31 AM on 02/10/2011
How can we trust the government to protect us when they can't even be trusted to regulate health care.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ronnie Avatar Dixon
Legislation is the art of compromise.
01:53 AM on 02/10/2011
There is no correlation between the Patriot Act and the quality of our national defense.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Barry Dennis
personal decisions, personal consequences
01:15 AM on 02/10/2011
Trusting government to protect Citizens' interests in the face of conflicts based on the will for political survival has never seemed wise.
12:44 AM on 02/10/2011
Three provisions of the Patriot Act?

AND a free trade deal, gone...

Obama must be crying like a baby... that little corporate lovin' Shrub-security embracing, fake Democrat!
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time2impeach
Send Justice CT packin'
12:39 AM on 02/10/2011
Kinda tough keeping those TP'ers under control, huh? I think FreedomWorks and the Koch Brothers, are...how did Shakespere put it?

Ah, yes...Hoist on their own pitard!

Tres Bon!
12:45 AM on 02/10/2011
I wouldn't count those three provisions out just yet....

Or the trade deal, either...

they'll be back for another try on both
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time2impeach
Send Justice CT packin'
12:56 AM on 02/10/2011
They'll be back for sure, but whether or not they receive the sort of cooperation they need remains to be seen...
01:28 AM on 02/10/2011
Well said!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NickfromCali
wants a better Democrat than Feinstein as my Senat
10:54 PM on 02/09/2011
You know that the holiest of the holies of the Tea Party, St. Michele of Minnesota, voted FOR the extension of the PATRIOT act.

So much for the less government in our lives Tea Party
12:46 AM on 02/10/2011
Well said!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Capn Slamo
09:06 PM on 02/09/2011
"energy prices would necessarily skyrocket"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
1776 or 1984
IT'S AN EMPIRE, NOT A REPUBLIC!
08:43 PM on 02/09/2011
If the US Government can't catch an AQ operative when he left a NSA/CIA wiretapped safehouse, followed to an AQ summit, and was rented a room by an FBI informant and given rent and flying lessons money from a Saudi intelligence agent, then I really don't believe that knowing what books someone buys off of Amazon is really going to help figh/ the War-on-Terr0r. I think they need to strengthen the bill further.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
1776 or 1984
IT'S AN EMPIRE, NOT A REPUBLIC!
09:41 PM on 02/09/2011
...can they strengthen the bill by forbidding the governemnt from terr0rizing us?
01:01 AM on 02/10/2011
That would be nice!
03:14 PM on 02/26/2011
They need to know everything we do so they can publicly humiliate someone if they need to, if they know too much. They also bug peoples houses and sell videos of us having sex, and our children taking showers. They are all a bunch of pedophile Freemason Satanists.