Text of Al Gore Speech
This effort to rework America's
carefully balanced constitutional design into a lopsided structure dominated by
an all powerful Executive Branch with a subservient Congress and judiciary
is-ironically-accompanied by an effort by the same administration to rework
America's foreign policy from one that is based primarily on U.S. moral
authority into one that is based on a misguided and self-defeating effort to
establish dominance in the world.
Probably the most important speech he ever
made:
Congressman Barr and I have disagreed
many times over the years, but we have joined together today with thousands of
our fellow citizens-Democrats and Republicans alike-to express our shared
concern that America's Constitution is in grave danger.
In spite of our differences over ideology
and politics, we are in strong agreement that the American values we hold most
dear have been placed at serious risk by the unprecedented claims of the
Administration to a truly breathtaking expansion of executive
power.
As we begin this new year, the Executive
Branch of our government has been caught eavesdropping on huge numbers of
American citizens and has brazenly declared that it has the unilateral right to
continue without regard to the established law enacted by Congress to prevent
such abuses.
It is imperative that respect for the
rule of law be restored.
So, many of us have come here to
Constitution Hall to sound an alarm and call upon our fellow citizens to put
aside partisan differences and join with us in demanding that our Constitution
be defended and preserved.
It is appropriate that we make this
appeal on the day our nation has set aside to honor the life and legacy of Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr., who challenged America to breathe new life into our
oldest values by extending its promise to all our people.
On this particular Martin Luther King
Day, it is especially important to recall that for the last several years of his
life, Dr. King was illegally wiretapped-one of hundreds of thousands of
Americans whose private communications were intercepted by the U.S. government
during this period.
The FBI privately called King the "most
dangerous and effective negro leader in the country" and vowed to "take him off
his pedestal." The government even attempted to destroy his marriage and
blackmail him into committing suicide.
This campaign continued until Dr. King's
murder. The discovery that the FBI conducted a long-running and extensive
campaign of secret electronic surveillance designed to infiltrate the inner
workings of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and to learn the most
intimate details of Dr. King's life, helped to convince Congress to enact
restrictions on wiretapping.
The result was the Foreign Intelligence
and Surveillance Act (FISA), which was enacted expressly to ensure that foreign
intelligence surveillance would be presented to an impartial judge to verify
that there is a sufficient cause for the surveillance. I voted for that law
during my first term in Congress and for almost thirty years the system has
proven a workable and valued means of according a level of protection for
private citizens, while permitting foreign surveillance to
continue.
Yet, just one month ago, Americans awoke
to the shocking news that in spite of this long settled law, the Executive
Branch has been secretly spying on large numbers of Americans for the last four
years and eavesdropping on "large volumes of telephone calls, e-mail messages,
and other Internet traffic inside the United States." The New York Times
reported that the President decided to launch this massive eavesdropping program
"without search warrants or any new laws that would permit such domestic
intelligence collection."
During the period when this eavesdropping
was still secret, the President went out of his way to reassure the American
people on more than one occasion that, of course, judicial permission is
required for any government spying on American citizens and that, of course,
these constitutional safeguards were still in place.
But surprisingly, the President's
soothing statements turned out to be false. Moreover, as soon as this massive
domestic spying program was uncovered by the press, the President not only
confirmed that the story was true, but also declared that he has no intention of
bringing these wholesale invasions of privacy to an end.
At present, we still have much to learn
about the NSA's domestic surveillance. What we do know about this pervasive
wiretapping virtually compels the conclusion that the President of the United
States has been breaking the law repeatedly and persistently.
A president who breaks the law is a
threat to the very structure of our government. Our Founding Fathers were
adamant that they had established a government of laws and not men. Indeed, they
recognized that the structure of government they had enshrined in our
Constitution - our system of checks and balances - was designed with a central
purpose of ensuring that it would govern through the rule of law. As John Adams
said: "The executive shall never exercise the legislative and judicial powers,
or either of them, to the end that it may be a government of laws and not of
men."
An executive who arrogates to himself the
power to ignore the legitimate legislative directives of the Congress or to act
free of the check of the judiciary becomes the central threat that the Founders
sought to nullify in the Constitution - an all-powerful executive too
reminiscent of the King from whom they had broken free. In the words of James
Madison, "the accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary,
in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many, and whether hereditary,
self-appointed, or elective, may justly be pronounced the very definition of
tyranny."
Thomas Paine, whose pamphlet, "On Common
Sense" ignited the American Revolution, succinctly described America's
alternative. Here, he said, we intended to make certain that "the law is
king."
Vigilant adherence to the rule of law
strengthens our democracy and strengthens America. It ensures that those who
govern us operate within our constitutional structure, which means that our
democratic institutions play their indispensable role in shaping policy and
determining the direction of our nation. It means that the people of this nation
ultimately determine its course and not executive officials operating in secret
without constraint.
The rule of law makes us stronger by
ensuring that decisions will be tested, studied, reviewed and examined through
the processes of government that are designed to improve policy. And the
knowledge that they will be reviewed prevents over-reaching and checks the
accretion of power.
A commitment to openness, truthfulness
and accountability also helps our country avoid many serious mistakes. Recently,
for example, we learned from recently classified declassified documents that the
Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which authorized the tragic Vietnam war, was actually
based on false information. We now know that the decision by Congress to
authorize the Iraq War, 38 years later, was also based on false information.
America would have been better off knowing the truth and avoiding both of these
colossal mistakes in our history. Following the rule of law makes us safer, not
more vulnerable.
The President and I agree on one thing.
The threat from terrorism is all too real. There is simply no question that we
continue to face new challenges in the wake of the attack on September 11th and
that we must be ever-vigilant in protecting our citizens from harm.
Where we disagree is that we have to
break the law or sacrifice our system of government to protect Americans from
terrorism. In fact, doing so makes us weaker and more vulnerable.
Once violated, the rule of law is in
danger. Unless stopped, lawlessness grows. The greater the power of the
executive grows, the more difficult it becomes for the other branches to perform
their constitutional roles. As the executive acts outside its constitutionally
prescribed role and is able to control access to information that would expose
its actions, it becomes increasingly difficult for the other branches to police
it. Once that ability is lost, democracy itself is threatened and we become a
government of men and not laws.
The President's men have minced words
about America's laws. The Attorney General openly conceded that the "kind of
surveillance" we now know they have been conducting requires a court order
unless authorized by statute. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
self-evidently does not authorize what the NSA has been doing, and no one inside
or outside the Administration claims that it does. Incredibly, the
Administration claims instead that the surveillance was implicitly authorized
when Congress voted to use force against those who attacked us on September
11th.
This argument just does not hold any
water. Without getting into the legal intricacies, it faces a number of
embarrassing facts. First, another admission by the Attorney General: he
concedes that the Administration knew that the NSA project was prohibited by
existing law and that they consulted with some members of Congress about
changing the statute. Gonzalez says that they were told this probably would not
be possible. So how can they now argue that the Authorization for the Use of
Military Force somehow implicitly authorized it all along? Second, when the
Authorization was being debated, the Administration did in fact seek to have
language inserted in it that would have authorized them to use military force
domestically - and the Congress did not agree. Senator Ted Stevens and
Representative Jim McGovern, among others, made statements during the
Authorization debate clearly restating that that Authorization did not operate
domestically.
When President Bush failed to convince
Congress to give him all the power he wanted when they passed the AUMF, he
secretly assumed that power anyway, as if congressional authorization was a
useless bother. But as Justice Frankfurter once wrote: "To find authority so
explicitly withheld is not merely to disregard in a particular instance the
clear will of Congress. It is to disrespect the whole legislative process and
the constitutional division of authority between President and
Congress."
This is precisely the "disrespect" for
the law that the Supreme Court struck down in the steel seizure
case.
It is this same disrespect for America's
Constitution which has now brought our republic to the brink of a dangerous
breach in the fabric of the Constitution. And the disrespect embodied in these
apparent mass violations of the law is part of a larger pattern of seeming
indifference to the Constitution that is deeply troubling to millions of
Americans in both political parties.
For example, the President has also
declared that he has a heretofore unrecognized inherent power to seize and
imprison any American citizen that he alone determines to be a threat to our
nation, and that, notwithstanding his American citizenship, the person
imprisoned has no right to talk with a lawyer-even to argue that the President
or his appointees have made a mistake and imprisoned the wrong
person.
The President claims that he can imprison
American citizens indefinitely for the rest of their lives without an arrest
warrant, without notifying them about what charges have been filed against them,
and without informing their families that they have been
imprisoned.
At the same time, the Executive Branch
has claimed a previously unrecognized authority to mistreat prisoners in its
custody in ways that plainly constitute torture in a pattern that has now been
documented in U.S. facilities located in several countries around the
world.
Over 100 of these captives have
reportedly died while being tortured by Executive Branch interrogators and many
more have been broken and humiliated. In the notorious Abu Ghraib prison,
investigators who documented the pattern of torture estimated that more than 90
percent of the victims were innocent of any charges.
This shameful exercise of power overturns
a set of principles that our nation has observed since General Washington first
enunciated them during our Revolutionary War and has been observed by every
president since then - until now. These practices violate the Geneva Conventions
and the International Convention Against Torture, not to mention our own laws
against torture.
The President has also claimed that he
has the authority to kidnap individuals in foreign countries and deliver them
for imprisonment and interrogation on our behalf by autocratic regimes in
nations that are infamous for the cruelty of their techniques for
torture.
Some of our traditional allies have been
shocked by these new practices on the part of our nation. The British Ambassador
to Uzbekistan - one of those nations with the worst reputations for torture in
its prisons - registered a complaint to his home office about the senselessness
and cruelty of the new U.S. practice: "This material is useless - we are selling
our souls for dross. It is in fact positively harmful."
Can it be true that any president really
has such powers under our Constitution? If the answer is "yes" then under the
theory by which these acts are committed, are there any acts that can on their
face be prohibited? If the President has the inherent authority to eavesdrop,
imprison citizens on his own declaration, kidnap and torture, then what can't he
do?
The Dean of Yale Law School, Harold Koh,
said after analyzing the Executive Branch's claims of these previously
unrecognized powers: "If the President has commander-in-chief power to commit
torture, he has the power to commit genocide, to sanction slavery, to promote
apartheid, to license summary execution."
The fact that our normal safeguards have
thus far failed to contain this unprecedented expansion of executive power is
deeply troubling. This failure is due in part to the fact that the Executive
Branch has followed a determined strategy of obfuscating, delaying, withholding
information, appearing to yield but then refusing to do so and dissembling in
order to frustrate the efforts of the legislative and judicial branches to
restore our constitutional balance.
For example, after appearing to support
legislation sponsored by John McCain to stop the continuation of torture, the
President declared in the act of signing the bill that he reserved the right not
to comply with it.
Similarly, the Executive Branch claimed
that it could unilaterally imprison American citizens without giving them access
to review by any tribunal. The Supreme Court disagreed, but the President
engaged in legal maneuvers designed to prevent the Court from providing
meaningful content to the rights of its citizens.
A conservative jurist on the Fourth
Circuit Court of Appeals wrote that the Executive Branch's handling of one such
case seemed to involve the sudden abandonment of principle "at substantial cost
to the government's credibility before the courts."
As a result of its unprecedented claim of
new unilateral power, the Executive Branch has now put our constitutional design
at grave risk. The stakes for America's representative democracy are far higher
than has been generally recognized.
These claims must be rejected and a
healthy balance of power restored to our Republic. Otherwise, the fundamental
nature of our democracy may well undergo a radical transformation.
For more than two centuries, America's
freedoms have been preserved in part by our founders' wise decision to separate
the aggregate power of our government into three co-equal branches, each of
which serves to check and balance the power of the other two.
On more than a few occasions, the dynamic
interaction among all three branches has resulted in collisions and temporary
impasses that create what are invariably labeled "constitutional crises." These
crises have often been dangerous and uncertain times for our Republic. But in
each such case so far, we have found a resolution of the crisis by renewing our
common agreement to live under the rule of law.
The principle alternative to democracy
throughout history has been the consolidation of virtually all state power in
the hands of a single strongman or small group who together exercise that power
without the informed consent of the governed.
It was in revolt against just such a
regime, after all, that America was founded. When Lincoln declared at the time
of our greatest crisis that the ultimate question being decided in the Civil War
was "whether that nation, or any nation so conceived, and so dedicated, can long
endure," he was not only saving our union but also was recognizing the fact that
democracies are rare in history. And when they fail, as did Athens and the Roman
Republic upon whose designs our founders drew heavily, what emerges in their
place is another strongman regime.
There have of course been other periods
of American history when the Executive Branch claimed new powers that were later
seen as excessive and mistaken. Our second president, John Adams, passed the
infamous Alien and Sedition Acts and sought to silence and imprison critics and
political opponents.
When his successor, Thomas Jefferson,
eliminated the abuses he said: "[The essential principles of our Government]
form the bright constellation which has gone before us and guided our steps
through an age of revolution and reformation... [S]hould we wander from them in
moments of error or of alarm, let us hasten to retrace our steps and to regain
the road which alone leads to peace, liberty and safety."
Our greatest President, Abraham Lincoln,
suspended habeas corpus during the Civil War. Some of the worst abuses prior to
those of the current administration were committed by President Wilson during
and after WWI with the notorious Red Scare and Palmer Raids. The internment of
Japanese Americans during WWII marked a low point for the respect of individual
rights at the hands of the executive. And, during the Vietnam War, the notorious
COINTELPRO program was part and parcel of the abuses experienced by Dr. King and
thousands of others.
But in each of these cases, when the
conflict and turmoil subsided, the country recovered its equilibrium and
absorbed the lessons learned in a recurring cycle of excess and
regret.
There are reasons for concern this time
around that conditions may be changing and that the cycle may not repeat itself.
For one thing, we have for decades been witnessing the slow and steady
accumulation of presidential power. In a global environment of nuclear weapons
and cold war tensions, Congress and the American people accepted ever enlarging
spheres of presidential initiative to conduct intelligence and counter
intelligence activities and to allocate our military forces on the global stage.
When military force has been used as an instrument of foreign policy or in
response to humanitarian demands, it has almost always been as the result of
presidential initiative and leadership. As Justice Frankfurter wrote in the
Steel Seizure Case, "The accretion of dangerous power does not come in a day. It
does come, however slowly, from the generative force of unchecked disregard of
the restrictions that fence in even the most disinterested assertion of
authority."
A second reason to believe we may be
experiencing something new is that we are told by the Administration that the
war footing upon which he has tried to place the country is going to "last for
the rest of our lives." So we are told that the conditions of national threat
that have been used by other Presidents to justify arrogations of power will
persist in near perpetuity.
Third, we need to be aware of the
advances in eavesdropping and surveillance technologies with their capacity to
sweep up and analyze enormous quantities of information and to mine it for
intelligence. This adds significant vulnerability to the privacy and freedom of
enormous numbers of innocent people at the same time as the potential power of
those technologies. These techologies have the potential for shifting the
balance of power between the apparatus of the state and the freedom of the
individual in ways both subtle and profound.
Don't misunderstand me: the threat of
additional terror strikes is all too real and their concerted efforts to acquire
weapons of mass destruction does create a real imperative to exercise the powers
of the Executive Branch with swiftness and agility. Moreover, there is in fact
an inherent power that is conferred by the Constitution to the President to take
unilateral action to protect the nation from a sudden and immediate threat, but
it is simply not possible to precisely define in legalistic terms exactly when
that power is appropriate and when it is not.
But the existence of that inherent power
cannot be used to justify a gross and excessive power grab lasting for years
that produces a serious imbalance in the relationship between the executive and
the other two branches of government.
There is a final reason to worry that we
may be experiencing something more than just another cycle of overreach and
regret. This Administration has come to power in the thrall of a legal theory
that aims to convince us that this excessive concentration of presidential
authority is exactly what our Constitution intended.
This legal theory, which its proponents
call the theory of the unitary executive but which is more accurately described
as the unilateral executive, threatens to expand the president's powers until
the contours of the constitution that the Framers actually gave us become
obliterated beyond all recognition. Under this theory, the President's authority
when acting as Commander-in-Chief or when making foreign policy cannot be
reviewed by the judiciary or checked by Congress. President Bush has pushed the
implications of this idea to its maximum by continually stressing his role as
Commander-in-Chief, invoking it has frequently as he can, conflating it with his
other roles, domestic and foreign. When added to the idea that we have entered a
perpetual state of war, the implications of this theory stretch quite literally
as far into the future as we can imagine.
This effort to rework America's carefully
balanced constitutional design into a lopsided structure dominated by an all
powerful Executive Branch with a subservient Congress and judiciary
is-ironically-accompanied by an effort by the same administration to rework
America's foreign policy from one that is based primarily on U.S. moral
authority into one that is based on a misguided and self-defeating effort to
establish dominance in the world.
The common denominator seems to be based
on an instinct to intimidate and control.
This same pattern has characterized the
effort to silence dissenting views within the Executive Branch, to censor
information that may be inconsistent with its stated ideological goals, and to
demand conformity from all Executive Branch employees.
For example, CIA analysts who strongly
disagreed with the White House assertion that Osama bin Laden was linked to
Saddam Hussein found themselves under pressure at work and became fearful of
losing promotions and salary increases.
Ironically, that is exactly what happened
to FBI officials in the 1960s who disagreed with J. Edgar Hoover's view that Dr.
King was closely connected to Communists. The head of the FBI's domestic
intelligence division said that his effort to tell the truth about King's
innocence of the charge resulted in he and his colleagues becoming isolated and
pressured. "It was evident that we had to change our ways or we would all be out
on the street.... The men and I discussed how to get out of trouble. To be in
trouble with Mr. Hoover was a serious matter. These men were trying to buy
homes, mortgages on homes, children in school. They lived in fear of getting
transferred, losing money on their homes, as they usually did. ... so they
wanted another memorandum written to get us out of the trouble that we were
in."
The Constitution's framers understood
this dilemma as well, as Alexander Hamilton put it, "a power over a man's
support is a power over his will." (Federalist No. 73)
Soon, there was no more difference of
opinion within the FBI. The false accusation became the unanimous view. In
exactly the same way, George Tenet's CIA eventually joined in endorsing a
manifestly false view that there was a linkage between al Qaeda and the
government of Iraq.
In the words of George Orwell: "We are
all capable of believing things which we know to be untrue, and then, when we
are finally proved wrong, impudently twisting the facts so as to show that we
were right. Intellectually, it is possible to carry on this process for an
indefinite time: the only check on it is that sooner or later a false belief
bumps up against solid reality, usually on a battlefield."
Whenever power is unchecked and
unaccountable it almost inevitably leads to mistakes and abuses. In the absence
of rigorous accountability, incompetence flourishes. Dishonesty is encouraged
and rewarded.
Last week, for example, Vice President
Cheney attempted to defend the Administration's eavesdropping on American
citizens by saying that if it had conducted this program prior to 9/11, they
would have found out the names of some of the hijackers.
Tragically, he apparently still doesn't
know that the Administration did in fact have the names of at least 2 of the
hijackers well before 9/11 and had available to them information that could have
easily led to the identification of most of the other hijackers. And yet,
because of incompetence in the handling of this information, it was never used
to protect the American people.
It is often the case that an Executive
Branch beguiled by the pursuit of unchecked power responds to its own mistakes
by reflexively proposing that it be given still more power. Often, the request
itself it used to mask accountability for mistakes in the use of power it
already has.
Moreover, if the pattern of practice
begun by this Administration is not challenged, it may well become a permanent
part of the American system. Many conservatives have pointed out that granting
unchecked power to this President means that the next President will have
unchecked power as well. And the next President may be someone whose values and
belief you do not trust. And this is why Republicans as well as Democrats should
be concerned with what this President has done. If this President's attempt to
dramatically expand executive power goes unquestioned, our constitutional design
of checks and balances will be lost. And the next President or some future
President will be able, in the name of national security, to restrict our
liberties in a way the framers never would have thought possible.
The same instinct to expand its power and
to establish dominance characterizes the relationship between this
Administration and the courts and the Congress.
In a properly functioning system, the
Judicial Branch would serve as the constitutional umpire to ensure that the
branches of government observed their proper spheres of authority, observed
civil liberties and adhered to the rule of law. Unfortunately, the unilateral
executive has tried hard to thwart the ability of the judiciary to call balls
and strikes by keeping controversies out of its hands - notably those
challenging its ability to detain individuals without legal process -- by
appointing judges who will be deferential to its exercise of power and by its
support of assaults on the independence of the third branch.
The President's decision to ignore FISA
was a direct assault on the power of the judges who sit on that court. Congress
established the FISA court precisely to be a check on executive power to
wiretap. Yet, to ensure that the court could not function as a check on
executive power, the President simply did not take matters to it and did not let
the court know that it was being bypassed.
The President's judicial appointments are
clearly designed to ensure that the courts will not serve as an effective check
on executive power. As we have all learned, Judge Alito is a longtime supporter
of a powerful executive - a supporter of the so-called unitary executive, which
is more properly called the unilateral executive. Whether you support his
confirmation or not - and I do not - we must all agree that he will not vote as
an effective check on the expansion of executive power. Likewise, Chief Justice
Roberts has made plain his deference to the expansion of executive power through
his support of judicial deference to executive agency rulemaking.
And the Administration has supported the
assault on judicial independence that has been conducted largely in Congress.
That assault includes a threat by the Republican majority in the Senate to
permanently change the rules to eliminate the right of the minority to engage in
extended debate of the President's judicial nominees. The assault has extended
to legislative efforts to curtail the jurisdiction of courts in matters ranging
from habeas
corpus to the pledge of allegiance.
In short, the Administration has demonstrated its contempt for the judicial role
and sought to evade judicial review of its actions at every turn.
But the most serious damage has been done
to the legislative branch. The sharp decline of congressional power and autonomy
in recent years has been almost as shocking as the efforts by the Executive
Branch to attain a massive expansion of its power.
I was elected to Congress in 1976 and
served eight years in the house, 8 years in the Senate and presided over the
Senate for 8 years as Vice President. As a young man, I saw the Congress first
hand as the son of a Senator. My father was elected to Congress in 1938, 10
years before I was born, and left the Senate in 1971.
The Congress we have today is
unrecognizable compared to the one in which my father served. There are many
distinguished Senators and Congressmen serving today. I am honored that some of
them are here in this hall. But the legislative branch of government under its
current leadership now operates as if it is entirely subservient to the
Executive Branch.
Moreover, too many Members of the House
and Senate now feel compelled to spend a majority of their time not in
thoughtful debate of the issues, but raising money to purchase 30 second TV
commercials.
There have now been two or three
generations of congressmen who don't really know what an oversight hearing is.
In the 70's and 80's, the oversight hearings in which my colleagues and I
participated held the feet of the Executive Branch to the fire - no matter which
party was in power. Yet oversight is almost unknown in the Congress
today.
The role of authorization committees has
declined into insignificance. The 13 annual appropriation bills are hardly ever
actually passed anymore. Everything is lumped into a single giant measure that
is not even available for Members of Congress to read before they vote on
it.
Members of the minority party are now
routinely excluded from conference committees, and amendments are routinely not
allowed during floor consideration of legislation.
In the United States Senate, which used
to pride itself on being the "greatest deliberative body in the world,"
meaningful debate is now a rarity. Even on the eve of the fateful vote to
authorize the invasion of Iraq, Senator Robert Byrd famously asked: "Why is this
chamber empty?"
In the House of Representatives, the
number who face a genuinely competitive election contest every two years is
typically less than a dozen out of 435.
And too many incumbents have come to
believe that the key to continued access to the money for re-election is to stay
on the good side of those who have the money to give; and, in the case of the
majority party, the whole process is largely controlled by the incumbent
president and his political organization.
So the willingness of Congress to
challenge the Administration is further limited when the same party controls
both Congress and the Executive Branch.
The Executive Branch, time and again, has
co-opted Congress' role, and often Congress has been a willing accomplice in the
surrender of its own power.
Look for example at the Congressional
role in "overseeing" this massive four year eavesdropping campaign that on its
face seemed so clearly to violate the Bill of Rights. The President says he
informed Congress, but what he really means is that he talked with the chairman
and ranking member of the House and Senate intelligence committees and the top
leaders of the House and Senate. This small group, in turn, claimed that they
were not given the full facts, though at least one of the intelligence committee
leaders handwrote a letter of concern to VP Cheney and placed a copy in his own
safe.
Though I sympathize with the awkward
position in which these men and women were placed, I cannot disagree with the
Liberty Coalition when it says that Democrats as well as Republicans in the
Congress must share the blame for not taking action to protest and seek to
prevent what they consider a grossly unconstitutional program.
Moreover, in the Congress as a whole-both
House and Senate-the enhanced role of money in the re-election process, coupled
with the sharply diminished role for reasoned deliberation and debate, has
produced an atmosphere conducive to pervasive institutionalized
corruption.
The Abramoff scandal is but the tip of a
giant iceberg that threatens the integrity of the entire legislative branch of
government.
It is the pitiful state of our
legislative branch which primarily explains the failure of our vaunted checks
and balances to prevent the dangerous overreach by our Executive Branch which
now threatens a radical transformation of the American system.
I call upon Democratic and Republican
members of Congress today to uphold your oath of office and defend the
Constitution. Stop going along to get along. Start acting like the independent
and co-equal branch of government you're supposed to be.
But there is yet another Constitutional
player whose pulse must be taken and whose role must be examined in order to
understand the dangerous imbalance that has emerged with the efforts by the
Executive Branch to dominate our constitutional system.
We the people are-collectively-still the
key to the survival of America's democracy. We-as Lincoln put it, "[e]ven we
here"-must examine our own role as citizens in allowing and not preventing the
shocking decay and degradation of our democracy.
Thomas Jefferson said: "An informed
citizenry is the only true repository of the public will."
The revolutionary departure on which the
idea of America was based was the audacious belief that people can govern
themselves and responsibly exercise the ultimate authority in self-government.
This insight proceeded inevitably from the bedrock principle articulated by the
Enlightenment philosopher John Locke: "All just power is derived from the
consent of the governed."
The intricate and carefully balanced
constitutional system that is now in such danger was created with the full and
widespread participation of the population as a whole. The Federalist Papers
were, back in the day, widely-read newspaper essays, and they represented only
one of twenty-four series of essays that crowded the vibrant marketplace of
ideas in which farmers and shopkeepers recapitulated the debates that played out
so fruitfully in Philadelphia.
Indeed, when the Convention had done its
best, it was the people - in their various States - that refused to confirm the
result until, at their insistence, the Bill of Rights was made integral to the
document sent forward for ratification.
And it is "We the people" who must now
find once again the ability we once had to play an integral role in saving our
Constitution.
And here there is cause for both concern
and great hope. The age of printed pamphlets and political essays has long since
been replaced by television - a distracting and absorbing medium which sees
determined to entertain and sell more than it informs and educates.
Lincoln's memorable call during the Civil
War is applicable in a new way to our dilemma today: "We must disenthrall
ourselves, and then we shall save our country."
Forty years have passed since the
majority of Americans adopted television as their principal source of
information. Its dominance has become so extensive that virtually all
significant political communication now takes place within the confines of
flickering 30-second television advertisements.
And the political economy supported by
these short but expensive television ads is as different from the vibrant
politics of America's first century as those politics were different from the
feudalism which thrived on the ignorance of the masses of people in the Dark
Ages.
The constricted role of ideas in the
American political system today has encouraged efforts by the Executive Branch
to control the flow of information as a means of controlling the outcome of
important decisions that still lie in the hands of the people.
The Administration vigorously asserts its
power to maintain the secrecy of its operations. After all, the other branches
can't check an abuse of power if they don't know it is happening.
For example, when the Administration was
attempting to persuade Congress to enact the Medicare prescription drug benefit,
many in the House and Senate raised concerns about the cost and design of the
program. But, rather than engaging in open debate on the basis of factual data,
the Administration withheld facts and prevented the Congress from hearing
testimony that it sought from the principal administration expert who had
compiled information showing in advance of the vote that indeed the true cost
estimates were far higher than the numbers given to Congress by the
President.
Deprived of that information, and
believing the false numbers given to it instead, the Congress approved the
program. Tragically, the entire initiative is now collapsing- all over the
country- with the Administration making an appeal just this weekend to major
insurance companies to volunteer to bail it out.
To take another example, scientific
warnings about the catastrophic consequences of unchecked global warming were
censored by a political appointee in the White House who had no scientific
training. And today one of the leading scientific experts on global warming in
NASA has been ordered not to talk to members of the press and to keep a careful
log of everyone he meets with so that the Executive Branch can monitor and
control his discussions of global warming.
One of the other ways the Administration
has tried to control the flow of information is by consistently resorting to the
language and politics of fear in order to short-circuit the debate and drive its
agenda forward without regard to the evidence or the public interest. As
President Eisenhower said, "Any who act as if freedom's defenses are to be found
in suppression and suspicion and fear confess a doctrine that is alien to
America."
Fear drives out reason. Fear suppresses
the politics of discourse and opens the door to the politics of destruction.
Justice Brandeis once wrote: "Men feared witches and burnt women."
The founders of our country faced dire
threats. If they failed in their endeavors, they would have been hung as
traitors. The very existence of our country was at risk.
Yet, in the teeth of those dangers, they
insisted on establishing the Bill of Rights.
Is our Congress today in more danger than
were their predecessors when the British army was marching on the Capitol? Is
the world more dangerous than when we faced an ideological enemy with tens of
thousands of missiles poised to be launched against us and annihilate our
country at a moment's notice? Is America in more danger now than when we faced
worldwide fascism on the march-when our fathers fought and won two World Wars
simultaneously?
It is simply an insult to those who came
before us and sacrificed so much on our behalf to imply that we have more to be
fearful of than they. Yet they faithfully protected our freedoms and now it is
up to us to do the same.
We have a duty as Americans to defend our
citizens' right not only to life but also to liberty and the pursuit of
happiness. It is therefore vital in our current circumstances that immediate
steps be taken to safeguard our Constitution against the present danger posed by
the intrusive overreaching on the part of the Executive Branch and the
President's apparent belief that he need not live under the rule of
law.
I endorse the words of Bob Barr, when he
said, "The President has dared the American people to do something about it. For
the sake of the Constitution, I hope they will."
A special counsel should immediately be
appointed by the Attorney General to remedy the obvious conflict of interest
that prevents him from investigating what many believe are serious violations of
law by the President. We have had a fresh demonstration of how an independent
investigation by a special counsel with integrity can rebuild confidence in our
system of justice. Patrick Fitzgerald has, by all accounts, shown neither fear
nor favor in pursuing allegations that the Executive Branch has violated other
laws.
Republican as well as Democratic members
of Congress should support the bipartisan call of the Liberty Coalition for the
appointment of a special counsel to pursue the criminal issues raised by
warrantless wiretapping of Americans by the President.
Second, new whistleblower protections
should immediately be established for members of the Executive Branch who report
evidence of wrongdoing -- especially where it involves the abuse of Executive
Branch authority in the sensitive areas of national security.
Third, both Houses of Congress should
hold comprehensive-and not just superficial-hearings into these serious
allegations of criminal behavior on the part of the President. And, they should
follow the evidence wherever it leads.
Fourth, the extensive new powers
requested by the Executive Branch in its proposal to extend and enlarge the
Patriot Act should, under no circumstances be granted, unless and until there
are adequate and enforceable safeguards to protect the Constitution and the
rights of the American people against the kinds of abuses that have so recently
been revealed.
Fifth, any telecommunications company
that has provided the government with access to private information concerning
the communications of Americans without a proper warrant should immediately
cease and desist their complicity in this apparently illegal invasion of the
privacy of American citizens.
Freedom of communication is an essential
prerequisite for the restoration of the health of our democracy.
It is particularly important that the
freedom of the Internet be protected against either the encroachment of
government or the efforts at control by large media conglomerates. The future of
our democracy depends on it.
I mentioned that along with cause for
concern, there is reason for hope. As I stand here today, I am filled with
optimism that America is on the eve of a golden age in which the vitality of our
democracy will be re-established and will flourish more vibrantly than ever.
Indeed I can feel it in this hall.
As Dr. King once said, "Perhaps a new
spirit is rising among us. If it is, let us trace its movements and pray that
our own inner being may be sensitive to its guidance, for we are deeply in need
of a new way beyond the darkness that seems so close around us."
Posted: Mon - January 16, 2006 at 12:17 PM