Jane Harman: Angry, Partisan, Civil Liberties Extremist
by Glenn Greenwald
by
Glenn Greenwald
Blue
Dog Rep. Jane Harman once the most
vigorous Democratic cheerleader of Bush's NSA warrantless
eavesdropping program is rip-roarin' angry today. Apparently,
her private conversations were eavesdropped
on by the U.S. Government! This is a grave outrage
that, as she told
Andrea Mitchell just moments ago, demands a probing investigation:
That's what
I asked Attorney General Holder to do to release any tapes,
I don't know whether they were legally made or not, of my conservations
about this matter . . . and to hope that he will investigate
whether other members of Congress or other innocent Americans
might have been subject to this same treatment. I call
it an abuse of power in the letter I wrote him this morning. .
. .
I'm just
very disappointed that my country I'm an American citizen
just like you are could have permitted what I think
is a gross abuse of power in recent years. I'm one member
of Congress who may be caught up in it, and I have a bully
pulpit and I can fight back. I'm thinking about others
who have no bully pulpit, who may not be aware, as I was not,
that someone is listening in on their conversations, and they're
innocent Americans.
So if I understand
this correctly and I'm pretty sure I do when the U.S.
Government eavesdropped for years on American citizens with no warrants
and in violation of the law, that was "both
legal and necessary" as well as "essential
to U.S. national security," and it was the "despicable"
whistle-blowers (such as Thomas Tamm) who disclosed that
crime and the newspapers
which reported it who should have been criminally investigated,
but not the lawbreaking government officials. But when the U.S.
Government legally and with warrants eavesdrops
on Jane Harman, that is an outrageous invasion
of privacy and a violent assault on her rights as an American
citizen, and full-scale investigations must be commenced immediately
to get to the bottom of this abuse of power. Behold Jane
Harman's overnight transformation from Very Serious Champion
of the Lawless Surveillance State to shrill civil liberties extremist.
But I'm really
wondering: as serious as it is when a member of Congress
is the target of government eavesdropping, can we really afford
to investigate this? After all, we have so many very
important things to do. It really seems like we need to be
looking forward, not backwards. The Bush administration
is gone. This all happened in 2005 years ago.
Is this really a time to be pursuing grudges, to be re-litigating
old disputes? What kind of partisan witch hunt is Harman after? We
can, and surely should, reflect on what happened to her in
fact, let us now pause together for a moment of quiet reflection
on what was done to Jane Harman but this is not a time for
retribution or looking back. "Most Americans" want the
people's business done, not "abuse of power" investigations.
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