Clarity from Edward Snowden and Murky Response from
Progressive Leaders in Congress
By Norman Solomon
By Norman Solomon
House Speaker John Boehner
calls Edward Snowden a “traitor.” The chair of the Senate
Intelligence Committee, Dianne Feinstein, labels his brave
whistleblowing “an act of treason.” What about the leadership of
the Congressional Progressive Caucus?
As the
largest caucus of Democrats on Capitol Hill, the Progressive
Caucus could supply a principled counterweight to the bombast
coming from the likes of Boehner and Feinstein. But for that to
happen, leaders of the 75-member caucus would need to set a good
example by putting up a real fight.
Right now,
even when we hear some promising words, the extent of the
political resolve behind them is hazy.
“This
indiscriminate data collection undermines Americans’ basic
freedoms,” Progressive Caucus co-chair Keith Ellison said about
NSA spying on phone records. He added: “Our citizens’ right to
privacy is fundamental and non-negotiable. . . . The program
we’re hearing about today seems not to respect that boundary.
It, and any other programs the NSA is running with other telecom
companies, should end.”
The other
co-chair of the Progressive Caucus, Raul Grijalva, was blunt. “A
secretive intelligence agency gathering millions of phone
records and using them as it sees fit is the kind of excess many
of us warned about after the Patriot Act became law,” he said.
“Continuing this program indefinitely gives the impression of
being under constant siege and needing to know everything at all
times to keep us safe, which I find a very troubling view of
American security policy.”
And
Grijalva said pointedly: “We’re being assured that this is
limited, supervised and no big deal. When we heard the same
under President Bush, we weren’t comfortable taking his word for
it and moving on. I feel the same today.”
The five
vice chairs of the Congressional Progressive Caucus are a mixed
civil-liberties bag.
Judy Chu
of California put out a vapid statement, calling for “release of
unclassified reports by the administration on how FISA powers
are used” and offering the bromide “need to strike a balance
between clandestine efforts and transparency.”
Rhode
Island’s David Cicilline called the NSA spying on phone records
and the Internet “very disturbing.” But he went on to merely
state that “the federal government has a responsibility to both
ensure our national security and maintain every citizen's
essential right to privacy.”
Michael
Honda, who faces a corporate challenger next year in his digital
tech-heavy district in the San Jose area, had this to say: “I am
deeply disturbed by the National Security Agency's wholesale
surveillance of phone and online activity of Americans without
just cause. . . . I believe all Americans should be extremely
wary of this type of large-scale data gathering of personal,
private online data.”
Sheila
Jackson Lee of Houston, who sits on the Homeland Security
Committee in the House, displayed her proficiency at
national-security babble while sidestepping huge violations of
civil liberties. She touted a need to reduce use of private
contractors and “repair deficiencies in the security clearance
system.”
Jan
Schakowsky, a representative from Chicago who’s a member of the
House Intelligence Committee, put out a statement saying: “I
have had longstanding concerns with the broad surveillance
powers Congress has given intelligence agencies, including the
National Security Agency.”
But
nice-sounding statements don’t cause big changes in policies.
If the
past is any guide, leaders and other members of the Progressive
Caucus will periodically say things that appeal to progressive
constituencies back home -- without throwing down the gauntlet
and battling an administration that has made clear its contempt
for essential civil liberties.
The
potential and the problem are perhaps best symbolized by the
Progressive Caucus whip, Barbara Lee of California, arguably the
strongest progressive in the House.
Lee
provided a good statement to a local newspaper, saying: “The
right to privacy in this country is non-negotiable. We have a
system of checks and balances in place to protect our most basic
civil liberties, and while I believe that national security is
paramount, we must move forward in a way that does not sacrifice
our American values and freedoms.”
Yet a full
week after the NSA surveillance story broke, there wasn’t any
news release on the subject to be found on Congresswoman Lee’s
official website. She had not issued any other statement on the
scandal.
If the
most progressive members of Congress aren’t willing to go to the
mat against fellow-Democrat Obama over an issue as profound as
the Bill of Rights, the result will be a tragic failure of
leadership -- as well as an irreparable disaster for the United
States of America.
And how
about speaking up for Edward Snowden while some in both parties
on Capitol Hill are calling him a traitor and pronouncing him
guilty of treason? Public mention of the virtues of his
courageous whistleblowing seems to be a congressional bridge way
too far.
So, as in
countless other moments of history, “when the people lead, the
leaders will follow” -- and only then. You can help lead if you
sign the petition “Thank NSA Whistleblower Edward Snowden” by
clicking here.
Norman Solomon is
co-founder of RootsAction.org
- Normansolomon.com
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