Montana Women For

Education and advocacy to encourage women’s participation in our democracy.

greyimg

Congress gives Immunity to Telecoms who spied on us.

Posted by Margie on June 20th, 2008  | A COMMENTS box is at end of post
Published in Legislation, Actions, Commentary, News, General Interest

| June 20, 2008 08:15 AM

Yesterday House Democrats and Republicans effectively struck a deal to “provide what amounts to legal immunity to the phone companies that took part in President Bush’s program of eavesdropping.” Today the parties will vote on the compromise bill. The New York Times has details below on the compromise. The AP will have updates of the voting here.

After months of wrangling, Democratic and Republican leaders in Congress struck a deal on Thursday to overhaul the rules on the government’s wiretapping powers and provide what amounts to legal immunity to the phone companies that took part in President Bush’s program of eavesdropping without warrants after the Sept. 11 attacks.

The deal, expanding the government’s powers to spy on terrorism suspects in some major respects, would strengthen the ability of intelligence officials to eavesdrop on foreign targets. It would also allow them to conduct emergency wiretaps without court orders on American targets for a week if it is determined that important national security information would otherwise be lost. If approved, as appears likely, the agreement would be the most significant revision of surveillance law in 30 years.

Salon’s Glenn Greenwald posted the amount of money each of the major telecoms involved spent on lobbyists to curry a favorable outcome for this legislation. Read an excerpt below:

Just in the first three months of 2008, recent lobbyist disclosure statements reveal that AT&T spent $5.2 million in lobbyist fees (putting it well ahead of its 2007 pace, when it spent just over $17 million). In the first quarter of 2008, Verizon spent $4.8 million on lobbyist fees, while Comcast spent $2.6 million. So in the first three months of this year, those three telecoms — which would be among the biggest beneficiaries of telecom amnesty (right after the White House) — spent a combined total of almost $13 million on lobbyists. They’re on pace to spend more than $50 million on lobbying this year — just those three companies.

No comments on this post so far.

Currently browsing "Congress gives Immunity to Telecoms who spied on us."
Follow-up on this comment thread with our Comment RSS feed, or leave a trackback.

Speak your mind. Leave your comment or a question below:

Submitting a comment means you agree to have it published. All comments are moderated before publication. We reserve the right to edit comments for length, racist, sexist, or homophobic slurs, profanity, or otherwise inappropriate language. We don't have the resources to fact-check comments, so we hope you've done your homework before you comment.

 Name (Required. You can choose to use just a first name.)

 Email Address (Private, will not be used/published.)

 Website (Optional)

Powered by WP Hashcash