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April 01, 2009

If Clinton Could, So Can Bush

Michelle Malkin brings to our attention an article over at The Corner by Andy McCarthy regarding the legality of President Bush's NSA terrorist surveillance program.

Several former Clinton administration officials are among the group of “scholars of constitutional law and former government officials” who last week submitted a letter to Congress – posted on the New York Review of Books website – asserting that the Bush administration had “fail[ed] to identify any plausible legal authority” for the NSA program that does not comply with the warrant procedure mandated by Congress in FISA (the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978). One of those former Clinton administration officials is Walter Dellinger.

But in 1994, Dellinger was singing a different tune. As the Assistant Attorney General in the Clinton Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, Dellinger explained in a written opinion to the White House, that: “The President has enhanced responsibility to resist unconstitutional provisions that encroach upon the constitutional powers of the Presidency.”

The article is well worth the read, and if you al Qaeda sympathizing liberals can't accept it, feel free to watch your party continue down their downward spiral.

Posted by Aaron at April 1, 2009 12:00 AM

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Comments

We libs respect the Bill of Rights - a concept that is so 18th-century to Republitards, apparently. The good news for justice and freedom, is that there have been two government studies indicating that Bush is on shakey legal ground wrt FISA. Remember, the law isn't invalidated if the authorities didn't prosecute for an alleged actions in the past. It still applies today, and Bush is *currently* commiting the crime. Throw the book at him!

Posted by plausible_deniability [TypeKey Profile Page] at February 5, 2006 12:03 PM