RINF.COM: L'ALTERNATIVA ROMPENTESI DI NOTIZIE
|
![]() |
ROMPERE LE NOTIZIE |
Il consigliere dice che parti posteriori Bush di McCain Wiretaps
Sabato 7 giugno 2008
In una lettera inviata in linea dalla revisione nazionale questa settimana, il consigliere, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, ad esempio il sig. McCain ha creduto che la costituzione desse il sig. Bush l'alimentazione autorizzare Agenzia di sicurezza nazionale per controllare telefonate degli Americani' ed E-mail internazionali senza garanzie, malgrado uno statuto federale 1978 che ha richiesto la supervisione della corte di sorveglianza. Sig. McCain crede che “nč la gestione nč il bisogno dei telecoms chieda scusa per le azioni che la maggior parte della gente, tranne il A.C.L.U. e gli avvocati di prova, capiscono erano costituzionali ed adatti come conseguenza degli attacchi a settembre. 11, 2001,„ sig. Holtz-Eakin ha scritto. E se sig. McCain č scelto presidente, il sig. Holtz-Eakin ha aggiunto, lui farebbe tutto che potrebbe impedire gli attacchi del terrorista, “compreso chiedere i telecoms l'assistenza adatta raccogliere l'intelligenza contro le minacce straniere negli Stati Uniti come autorizzato dall'Article II della costituzione.„ Anche se un portavoce per il sig. McCain, il nominee presidenziale repubblicano presuntivo, negato che i punti di vista del senatore su alimentazione dell'esecutivo e di sorveglianza avevano spostato, esperti legali ha detto la lettera contrapposta con il sig. di dichiarazione. McCain precedentemente ha fatto circa i limiti di alimentazione presidenziale. In un'intervista circa i suoi punti di vista sui limiti di alimentazione esecutiva con il globo de Boston sei mesi fa, sig. McCain ha suggerito fortemente che se diventasse il comandante seguente in capo, si considererebbe costretto ad obbedire una limitazione dello statuto che cosa ha fatto negli argomenti di sicurezza nazionale. Sig. McCain č stato chiesto se ha creduto che il presidente avesse alimentazione costituzionale condurre la sorveglianza su terreno americano per gli scopi di sicurezza nazionale senza una garanzia, senza riguardo agli statuti federali. Ha risposto: “Ci sono alcune zone dove gli statuti non si applicano, quale nella sorveglianza delle comunicazioni d'oltremare. Where they do apply, however, I think that presidents have the obligation to obey and enforce laws that are passed by Congress and signed into law by the president, no matter what the situation is.” Following up, the interviewer asked whether Mr. McCain was saying a statute trumped a president’s powers as commander in chief when it came to a surveillance law. “I don’t think the president has the right to disobey any law,” Mr. McCain replied. David Golove, a New York University law professor who specializes in executive power issues, said that while the language used by Mr. McCain in his answers six months ago was imprecise, the recent statement by Mr. Holtz-Eakin “seems to contradict precisely what he said earlier.” Mr. McCain’s position, as outlined by Mr. Holtz-Eakin, was criticized by the campaign of his presumptive Democratic opponent in the presidential election, Senator Barack Obama of Illinois. Greg Craig, an Obama campaign adviser, said Wednesday that anyone reading Mr. McCain’s answers to The Globe and the more recent statement would be “totally confused” about “what Senator McCain thinks about what the Constitution means and what President Bush did.” “American voters deserve to know which side of this flip-flop he’s on today, and what he would do as president,” Mr. Craig said in a phone interview. Tucker Bounds, a McCain campaign spokesman, said Mr. McCain’s position on surveillance laws and executive power “has not changed.” “John McCain has been an unequivocal advocate of pursuing the radicals and extremists who seek to attack Americans,” Mr. Bounds wrote in an e-mail message, adding that Mr. McCain’s “votes and positions have been completely consistent and any suggestion otherwise is a distortion of his clear record.” Asked whether the views Mr. Holtz-Eakin imputed to Mr. McCain were inaccurate, Mr. Bounds did not repudiate the statement. But late Thursday Mr. Bounds called and said, “to the extent that the comments of members of our staff are misinterpreted, they shouldn’t be read into as anything otherwise.” Neither Mr. McCain nor Mr. Holtz-Eakin, a former head of the Congressional Budget Office who primarily advises the campaign on economic issues, was available for comment, Mr. Bounds said. Mr. McCain has long distanced himself from the Bush administration on legal issues involving detention and interrogation in the fight against terrorism, an approach that has sometimes aroused suspicion among conservative supporters of the Bush administration. But more recently, as Mr. McCain has worked to consolidate his party’s base, he has taken several positions that have won him praise from his former critics while drawing fire from Democrats. In February, for example, Mr. McCain voted against limiting the Central Intelligence Agency to the techniques approved in the Army Field Manual on Interrogation, which complies with the Geneva Conventions. Mr. McCain said the C.I.A. needed the flexibility to use other techniques so long as it did not abuse detainees. He also voted for legislation that would free telecommunications companies from lawsuits alleging that they illegally allowed the N.S.A. to eavesdrop on their customers’ phone calls and e-mail without a warrant. The legislation would also essentially legalize a form of surveillance without warrants going forward. But Mr. McCain had previously stopped short of endorsing the view that Mr. Bush’s program of surveillance without warrants was lawful all along because a president’s wartime powers can trump statutory limits. Andrew C. McCarthy, a National Review columnist who has defended the administration’s legal theories, wrote that Mr. Holtz-Eakin’s statement “implicitly shows Senator McCain’s thinking has changed as time has gone on and he has educated himself on this issue.” And Glenn Greenwald, a Salon columnist and critic of the Bush administration’s legal claims, wrote that the statement was a “complete reversal” by Mr. McCain, accusing the candidate of seeking “to shore up the support of right-wing extremists.” The reaction to Mr. Holtz-Eakin’s statement is the latest link in a chain of disputes over Mr. McCain’s positions on surveillance over the past two weeks. On May 23, the McCain campaign sent a volunteer lawyer, Chuck Fish, to be the candidate’s surrogate at a conference on computer policy. Mr. Fish spoke at a panel discussion on whether phone and Internet companies should be granted immunity from lawsuits for having helped Mr. Bush’s surveillance program. Mr. Fish suggested that Mr. McCain wanted to impose conditions — like Congressional hearings — that would ensure that such “forgiveness” would not signal that the telecoms should feel free to disregard communications privacy laws in the future if a president tells them to. After Wired magazine wrote about Mr. Fish’s remarks on its blog, raising the question of whether Mr. McCain’s position had become more skeptical about immunity, the McCain campaign put out a statement saying that Mr. Fish was mistaken. Mr. McCain supported ending the lawsuits without conditions and his position had not changed, the campaign said. On May 29, The Washington Post quoted Mr. Holtz-Eakin as saying that Mr. McCain did not want the telecoms “put into this position again” and that “there must be clear guidelines for their participation and sufficient vetting” in any future situation. Mr. Holtz-Eakin’s comments in turn drew fire from Mr. McCarthy. In a blog posting on the National Review Web site, he demanded to know whether Mr. McCain believes the Constitution authorizes a president to lawfully go “arguably beyond what is prescribed in a statute” during a national security crisis. Mr. Holtz-Eakin laid out Mr. McCain’s position on the president’s claimed constitutional powers to bypass surveillance laws in a letter to Mr. McCarthy, who this week called the statement “extremely significant” and said it “marks a welcome evolution on the senator’s thinking about executive power.” See More:Big Brother Bush USA NewsHave Your Say: Adviser Says McCain Backs Bush Wiretaps Please note, only selected comments will be published. Or discuss this report in our new forums This entry was posted on Saturday, June 7th, 2008 at 12:40 am and is filed under Surveillance, Civil Liberties & Human Rights News . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site. |
Translations![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
Free Newsletter
Related News
Email This Page To A Friend Latest Headlines
More Breaking News Archive |
TOP NEWS DISCUSSIONS |
LATEST NEWS DISCUSSIONS |
|
|
Site Broken? Hacked? Abducted? EU-wide ID card scheme could use mobile phones The First Signs of "Peak Gas"? US Paying Allies to Fight War in Iraq Howard accused of war crimes |
Joe commented on: The First Signs of “Peak Gas”? It seems to me that there is a thin line separating what we term “investme nt” from... Continue Reading & Reply Mick Meaney commented on: Site Broken? Hacked? Abducted? It’s kind of ok now, forum is back up, no posts missing. Have FTP access again but there is a PHP... Continue Reading & Reply Ken Williamson commented on: A McCain Presidency Guarantees a Military Draft? Very good point. I agree 100%. I wrote on www.posterspost .com about McCain’s... Continue Reading & Reply Jon commented on: Students Denied Legal Aid Timotei.. come on after the first line you should have sensed a bit of sarcasm.. you give students like me and the... Continue Reading & Reply |
RSS Forum Posts Temp Offline - See Latest Forum Posts ![]() |
The views expressed in the RINF news wire and newsletter are the sole responsibility of the author (s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the webmaster. RINF.COM: Breaking News & Alternative Media is Copyleft - Copy & Distribute Freely. News Forum |