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"Continuity of Government Planning
has ... Already Superseded the Constitution as a Higher Authority"
George
Washington's Blog
Saturday, May 10, 2008
UC Berkeley Professor Emeritus
Peter Dale Scott has warned:
"If members of the Homeland Security Committee cannot
enforce their right to read secret plans of the Executive Branch,
then the systems of checks and balances established by the U.S.
Constitution would seem to be failing.
To put it another way, if the White House is successful
in frustrating DeFazio, then Continuity of Government planning has
arguably already superseded
the Constitution as a higher authority."
What's he talking about?
Well, in the summer 2007, Congressman Peter DeFazio, on the Homeland
Security Committee (and so with proper security access to be briefed
on COG issues), inquired about continuity of government plans, and
was refused
access. Indeed, DeFazio told Congress that the
entire Homeland Security Committee of the U.S. Congress
has been denied access to the plans by the
White House (video; or here
is the transcript). The Homeland Security Committee has full
clearance to view all information about COG plans. DeFazio
concluded: "Maybe
the people who think there’s a conspiracy out there are right”.
Professor Scott's point that COG planning may
have already superseded
the Constitution can be summarized by making an analogy. Let's assume
that the police are not supposed to seize and sell a suspect's house
unless a court has held a full trial and found that person guilty
of a certain offense. And let's say that the police seize and sell
somebody's house, but that the suspect's relatives cannot find any
record that there has been a trial, let alone a finding of guilt
by the court.
(Article continues below)
Let's say they go to the City Council (which
is the local counterpart of the U.S.
Congress -- that is, part of the legislative
branch), and the City Council asks the
police if the suspect was found guilty by the court. If the police
refuse to even answer the
City Council's question, that shows that the rule of law has broken
down. In other words, whether or not there was a trial and a guilty
verdict, the failure of the police to answer the question shows
that the police (part
of the executive branch) are acting
outside of the law by failing to respect the
separation of powers between the police and the City Council.
As Steven Aftergood, of the Federation of American Scientists Project
on Government Secrecy, notes:
"Of
the 54 National Security Presidential Directives issued by the [George
W.] Bush Administration to date, the titles of only about half have
been publicly identified. There is descriptive material or actual
text in the public domain for only about a third. In other words,
there are dozens of undisclosed Presidential directives that define
U.S. national security policy and task government agencies, but
whose substance is unknown
either to the public or, as a rule,
to Congress."
Similarly, Senator Russ Feingold, a member of the Senate Intelligence
and Judiciary committees, wrote
yesterday in the Los Angeles Times:
"The memos on torture policy that have been released or
leaked hint at a much bigger body of law about which we know virtually
nothing. The Yoo memo was filled with references to other Justice
Department memos that have yet to see the light of day, on subjects
including the government's ability to detain U.S. citizens without
congressional authorization and the government's ability to bypass
the 4th Amendment in domestic military operations.
Another body of secret law involves the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act (FISA). In 1978, Congress created the special FISA court to
review the government's requests for wiretaps in intelligence investigations,
which is -- and should be -- done behind closed doors. But with
changes in technology and with this administration's efforts to
expand its surveillance powers, the court today is doing more than
just reviewing warrant applications. It is issuing important interpretations
of FISA that have effectively made new law.
These interpretations deeply affect Americans' privacy rights, and
yet Americans don't know about them because they are not allowed
to see them. Very few members of Congress have been allowed to see
them either. When the Senate recently approved some broad and controversial
changes to FISA, almost none of
the senators voting on the bill could know what the law currently
is.
The code of secrecy also extends
to yet another body of law: changes to executive orders. The administration
takes the position that a president can "waive" or "modify" a published
executive order without any public notice -- simply by not following
it. It's every president's prerogative to change an executive order,
but doing so without public notice works a secret change in the
law. And, because the published order stays on the books, Congress
and the public have no idea that it's no longer in effect. We
don't know how many of these covert changes have been made by this
administration or, for that matter, by past administrations.
***
Keeping the law secret doesn't enhance national security, but it
does give the government free
rein to operate without oversight or accountability. Even the congressional
intelligence committees, which are supposed to oversee the intelligence
community, have been denied access to some of these legal opinions.
Congress should pass legislation
to require the administration to alert Congress
when the law created by Justice Department opinions ignores
or even violates the laws passed by Congress, and to
require public notice when it is waiving or modifying a published
executive order. Congress and the public shouldn't have to wonder
whether the executive branch is following the laws that are on the
books or some other, secret law."
Like all important
political issues of the day, the government will not agree to to the
right thing unless the public demands it. The White House will not
agree to follow the Constitution and the rule of law, or even to disclose
whether or not the COG plans which were
implemented on 9/11 are still in effect, unless the public demands
it. Professor Scott stresses
the importance of citizen activism in this regard:
"Will Congress insist on its right of review COG?
The answer to this question will depend on discussion in the blogosphere,
the degree of pressure exerted by the electorate on their representatives,
and the questions asked the men and women who would be president."
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