A Sneak Peak at Amending FISA

Glenn Greenwald analyzes reports of an agreement regarding how Congress will proceed with votes to amend FISA on Monday.

The essence of the new agreement is that most of the [proposed amendments to FISA] will be subject to a simple up-or-down vote -- if they get 50 votes, then they pass -- while several of the amendments will require 60 votes to pass. . . .

There are certain amendments that are not going to get even 50 votes -- including the Dodd/Feingold amendment to strip telecom immunity out of the bill -- and, for that reason, [conservatives] were more than willing to agree to a 50-vote threshold, since they know those amendments won't pass even in a simple up-or-down vote.

But then, there are other amendments which might be able to get 50 votes, but cannot get 60 votes -- such as Feinstein's amendment to transfer the telecom cases to the FISA court and her other amendment providing that FISA is the "exclusive means" for eavesdropping -- and, thus, those are the amendments for which the [conservatives] insisted upon a 60-vote requirement.

Here is a highly technical summary of the rules under which debate will occur.

Senator Feingold, who is sponsoring a number of amendments, explained that issues beyond granting retroactive immunity to telecommunications companies are at play.

This ACSBlog post explores the various legislative approaches to amending FISA.

ACS has a host of background materials on the separation of powers, privacy, and surveillance.


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