Nancy Pelosi Saved The NSA Surveillance Program; Now She Should Help Kill It
from the okay,-second-chance dept
As we pointed out yesterday, there was a bizarre group of Democratic congressional reps who apparently followed the lead of Nancy Pelosi in voting against the Amash Amendment to defund the NSA program to collect all of your phone data despite the fact that those same Representatives had voted against that very same program a couple years ago. We pointed out that it was clearly Pelosi's lead that made the others follow -- and it was likely that Pelosi was responding to great pressure from the White House. Now ForeignPolicy.com confirms that it was Pelosi's actions that "saved" the NSA surveillance program, noting that her lobbying was much more effective than NSA boss Keith Alexander's "private briefing" for Congress."Pelosi had meetings and made a plea to vote against the amendment and that had a much bigger effect on swing Democratic votes against the amendment than anything Alexander had to say," said the source, keeping in mind concerted White House efforts to influence Congress by Alexander and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper. "Had Pelosi not been as forceful as she had been, it's unlikely there would've been more Democrats for the amendment."Of course, the oddity here is that Pelosi has been a vocal critic of these programs in the past. And now that plenty of Pelosi supporters are quite pissed off that she effectively blocked the Amash Amendment, she appears to be trying to jump right back to that critic position:
[....]
"Pelosi had a big effect on more middle-of-the road hawkish Democrats who didn't want to be identified with a bunch of lefties [voting for the amendment]," said the aide. "As for the Alexander briefings: Did they hurt? No, but that was not the central force, at least among House Democrats. Nancy Pelosi's political power far outshines that of Keith Alexander's."
"Well, I didn't vote for the PATRIOT Act the last time it was up," she said today, at her weekly press briefing. "I don't want anybody to misunderstand a vote against the Amash resolution yesterday."While the cynical among you can rightly mock this position -- of voting to save the NSA spying program and then immediately claiming you're against it -- this could turn out to be a good thing. For whatever it's worth, the Amash amendment was a blunt instrument and attaching it to an appropriations bill might not have been the best way to go about stopping the NSA surveillance plan. The fact that the amendment was seven votes away from passing suggests that a more careful approach has a much higher likelihood of passing, and it might happen soon. If the Amash Amendment had received very few votes, this would be dead. But with it so close, there's enough momentum that a followup has a chance.
At the briefing, she emphasized her current effort circulating a letter for members to sign expressing concern over how metadata is collected.
So, Nancy Pelosi may have saved the NSA spying on Americans yesterday, but now she has the very real ability to kill it. The question is whether or not she'll follow through.
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Filed Under: 4th amendment, nancy pelosi, nsa, nsa surveillance, patriot act
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Well...
I really hope they do get an effective bill in play to limit or downright eliminate the NSA's 'secret' powers, but without a 'must pass' bill like the DoD funding one to protect it, I don't exactly put high odds on anything effective making it through intact.
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True. The US government was also against torture before they were for it...
The principles of those in our government are being lost because... wait for it... Terrorism!
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Of ALL the shit that's come out in the last 2 months, this amendment stopped 1 thing.
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A letter expressing concern
A “letter” “expressing” “concern” Iow, Ms Pelosi emphasized making a symbolic gesture over doing something effective.
Thinking about it, perhaps that judgement's a little hasty and not altogether fair: It could be that Ms Pelosi may have had some idea about how Mr Amash's amendment might fare in the Senate.
Although, I do tend to think that the Senate's reaction could have been worked out in conference committee.
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Sounds Familar
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Funding?
Its not like the NSA couldn't scrape together funding to just continue what they are doing (selling our metadata possibly?)
It won't be until the court is dismantled and their rulings rolled back to within the guidelines set forth by the constitution that this "monkey-business" will stop.
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"Defunding" is a last Hail Mary to stop deployment of bad legislation.
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Re:
While it does seem likely that pressure from the WH had something to do with this, the rest of your statement doesn't seem right, because she was speaking out against the program in 2011, 2 years after "her president" was in charge...
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Mike, I've heard rumor of Toledo where there were only 94,000 voters registered there to vote, yet Obama got 196,000 votes for the popular vote there. I think the people with the tin hats might be right about this. This really oddly correlates with the e-voting machine software patches.
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What was that saying about hammers?
You know, sometimes the problem is a nail.
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How realistic is it to think Pelosi will change?
Talk is cheap, and Obama can offer a lot to maintain Pelosi's support. Unless you can offer her more, she's going to stay in our megalomaniacal President's pocket.
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Just like a liberal, to flip flop ... Democrats accuse Republicans of flip flopping but it's the Democrats who do the actual flip flopping.
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At any rate:
Flip flopping is a silly thing to denounce. Changing your position when the facts on the ground change is a sign of character. The problem isn't flip flopping it's duplicity. It's not that she's changing her position it's that she's lying about why she takes a position at all. It's really about forming ranks with the president.
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[tangent]
"You don't say?"[sarc] - said everyone who's had a security clearance
While we really do need to rein in the NSA (see none of this secret court secretly interpreting the constitution in secret malarkey), we have to remember that the NSA is an intelligence agency that (while completely screwed up in the head) does has the best interests of the US at heart. Forcing the NSA to be 100% transparent in everything it does and showing the world every little tactic is uses to spy on people, foreign or domestic, is a BAD idea. Should the NSA being spying on people? Ideally no, but not having any kind of concealment for their surveillance programs is a naive, idealistic view to have.
Having an organization watching out for terrorists isn't supposed to be a bad thing. Problem is the whole 'who watches the watchers?' thing, which the government has dropped the ball on so badly it's put a hole in the floor.
It's no wonder people have such low approval of government these days...[/tangent]
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Response to: Internet Zen Master on Jul 26th, 2013 @ 10:00am
You're joking, right? The NSA is now a conglomeration of profit-driven corporate interests (over 70% of intelligence expenditures now go to the private sector), who lobby incessantly for a larger share of our taxes. Their mission is now to Collect Everything -- this way those in a position of power (Gen. Alexander, for example... or the President) can blackmail ANYONE... if all of our communications are hoovered up, it is no problem (as Snowden pointed out) for an analyst to construct an incriminating profile of ANYONE.
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I'm just shocked that nobody has called Democrats out on that fact. It's like voting on a budget without seeing what is included in the budget.
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Welcome to seeing what Tea Partiers, Libertarians, Republicans, Moderates, and Independents have been seeing and calling out for the past 5 years and being called ignorant, unintelligent ass swipes for it....She either did her lobbying against PRISM to create a smoke screen, or did this out if blind support for President Obama's views.
Political polarity on the scale that she performs is truly amazingly sickening. She only operates under the interests of the President and not of her district in California.
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Pelosi is my representative.
I are so sad.
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Voting Record
She's a politician, not a stateswoman, and she'll do whatever her friends in power tell her to do.
That doesn't mean her constituents, either.
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Re: Voting Record
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Re: Voting Record
She's not in the Senate. Also, last time around she voted *against* the extension, so the idea that she would be against repealing some provisions is clearly false.
I'm no fan of Pelosi, but making bogus claims doesn't help.
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and the answer is...
NO! She isn't going to kill it for the exact same reason she voted to kill the Amash amendment. She will do what she is told to do. She will pay lip service to the American citizens, but that is not who she or the vast majority those in political office care to serve. We don't pay well enough!
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If you're listening to her 'words' instead of her 'actions', then your just setting yourself up for future disappointments.
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You can learn a lot more about someone by watching their actions, than you can by listening to their words.
Words can be full of lies, but actions rarely are.
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Ok Nancy...
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Nancy is a genius.
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Speculation
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UNWARRANTED SURVEILLANCE
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Nancy's lies
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