Guess who’s going to Gitmo?

Yesterday, all the Republican Senators except Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island and Olympia Snowe of Maine lined up with the Bush administration to pass the “Military Commissions Act of 2006”, which defines the category of “unlawful enemy combatant” and establishes a new class of special courts (commissions) where the UEC’s can be tried. The WaPo’s careful military correspondent Jeffrey Smith explains that,

    the bill empowers the executive branch to detain indefinitely anyone it determines to have “purposefully and materially” supported anti-U.S. hostilities. Only foreign nationals among those detainees can be tried by the military commissions, as they are known, and sentenced to decades in jail or put to death.

This was a sad, sad day for the Republic. (Read the NYT’s excellent editorial on the shortcomings of the legislation, which ran yesterday, here.)
It was a sad day, too, for the Republican Party, three of whose leading senators– Warner, McCain, and L. Graham– had until last week stood out against the administration’s highly election-related attempt to ram this legislation through Congress. This week, only Chafee voted against the bill, while Snowe to her credit at least abstained.
Meanwhile, no fewer than welve Democratic senators crossed the floor to vote with the administration bill. (Names here.)
In his blog on Washingtonpost.com, Dan Froomkin wrote today:

    I’m still amazed that Democrats didn’t filibuster the bill in the Senate. Indeed, 12 Democrats actually voted for it.
    By contrast, Carl Hulse , writing in the New York Times, is amazed at how many Democrats voted against it: “The Democratic vote in the Senate on Thursday against legislation governing the treatment of terrorism suspects showed that party leaders believe that President Bush’s power to wield national security as a political issue is seriously diminished. . . .
    “It was a stark change from four years ago, when Mr. Bush cornered Democrats into another defining pre-election vote on security issues — that one to give the president the authority to launch an attack against Iraq. At the time, many Democrats felt they had little choice politically but to side with Mr. Bush, and a majority of Senate Democrats backed him.”

I guess this is a glass-half-empty vs. glass-half-full type of situation. On balance I guess I’m with Hulse. I think that, though it’s a pity that so many Dems in both houses ended up voting for the bill, at least it is good that (however slowly) some of the party’s pols are finding out that perhaps it’s okay to stand up to the Prez on issues vital to our self-worth and our national security…

3 thoughts on “Guess who’s going to Gitmo?”

  1. “I guess this is a glass-half-empty vs. glass-half-full type of situation.”
    Sorry, there’s no way to put even a half-way positive spin on this miserable surrender to fascism. I know that word is overused, but until I learn a better one, I’ll have to keep using it.
    Jay Rockefeller was a bit of a surprise. I hadn’t known that he favored torture, rape and detention without trial.
    On the brighter side, it appears we have one less child molester in Congress as of today.
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/washington/29wire-foley.html?hp&ex=1159588800&en=3ecd4438206bec48&ei=5094&partner=homepage
    Mark Foley was, not surprisingly, the chairman of the “Missing and Exploited Children’s Caucus” and had introduced legislation to protect children from exploitation by adults. You can read his stirring speeches on the subject here:
    http://www.vote-smart.org/speech.php?can_id=CNIP8121
    Oh, and of course he’s a Roman Catholic.

  2. I should have clarified further that (as Hulse had noted) it looks like “glass half full” in comparison with the performance of the Dems back in the authorizing-war-on-Iraq vote in October 2002. Like now, that too was an election season in which the Prez was trying to ram legislation through with the strong threat that the Dems would be tarred as “soft on terror” in the election if they dared vote against it– and many more of them then than now felt forced to support the Prez on those grounds.

  3. The Democratic vote in the Senate on Thursday against legislation governing the treatment of terrorism suspects showed that party leaders believe that President Bush’s power to wield national security as a political issue is seriously diminished. . . .
    This is amazing….. The Republicans are the Government, the Democrates are supposed to be the Opposition, yet we almost have to be grateful that not all Democrates voted in favour of granting Bush Dictatorial Powers?
    Habeas Corpus! Something is rotten in the state of Denmark, as the Bard said…..

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