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Bush asserts expanded surveillance powers over US mail
By Peter Daniels
10 January 2007
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President Bush has claimed the power to open peoples
mail without a judicial warrant, news reports last week revealed.
The White House claim of new presidential powers was made quietly
two weeks earlier, when Bush issued a signing statement
as he initialed the new Postal Accountability and Enhancement
Act on December 20, during the congressional winter recess. This
went completely unreported until an article appeared in the January
4 edition of the New York Daily News.
There was little that was controversial in the legislation,
which simply repeated an existing prohibition on the opening of
first-class mail by postal inspectors without a court warrant.
In signing the bill, however, Bush used the following language:
The executive branch shall construe [the law]...which provides
for opening of an item of a class of mail otherwise sealed against
inspection in a manner consistent, to the maximum extent permissible,
with the need to conduct searches in exigent circumstances, such
as to protect human life and safety against hazardous materials,
and the need for physical searches specifically authorized by
law for foreign intelligence collection.
In the aftermath of the Daily News report, White House
press secretary Tony Snow denied that there was any change, saying
that the signing statement represented merely a statement
of present law and present authorities granted to the president
of the United States.
However, others pointed out that the language of the statement,
although perhaps intentionally vague, contradicts the bill that
Bush has just signed, and goes beyond existing powers. It could
easily be used to open and read many pieces of mail.
The suggestion that the privacy of the mails can be ignored
comes in the wake of revelations over the past year about massive
government surveillance of telephone and e-mail communications,
and indicates that the Bush administration has no intention of
allowing the Republican reverses in the midterm elections to slow
down its steady encroachment on long-established privacy rights
and democratic rights generally, in the name of an endless war
on terror.
Kate Martin, director of the Center for National Security Studies
in Washington, stated that the government is already able to legally
open mail believed to contain a bomb or other imminent threat.
Bushs language expands that, however. The administration
is playing games about warrants, said Martin. If they
are not claiming new powers, then why did they need to issue a
signing statement? Martin pointed out that Bush is using
the same legal reasoning to justify warrantless opening of domestic
mail as he did with warrantless eavesdropping.
An unnamed senior US official said that Bushs statement
takes Executive Branch authority beyond anything weve
ever known.
There are two major Constitutional issues raised by the latest
events. First, as in the case of the warrantless eavesdropping
on telephone calls and e-mail, the opening of mail without a warrant
constitutes a flagrant violation of the US Bill of Rights, which
prohibits unreasonable search and seizure in the following language
of the 4th Amendment to the Constitution:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons,
houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and
seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue,
but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and
particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons
or things to be seized.
Additionally, the use of signing statements by the Bush administration
to grab new powers that have never been given to the executive
branch or to announce that the President will implement or reject
provisions of legislation as he sees fit calls into serious question
the separation of powers as spelled out in Articles I and II of
the Constitution, on the powers of the legislative and executive
branches respectively.
The Bush administrations use of signing statements is
completely unprecedented in US legislative history. Until he vetoed
stem cell legislation this past year, Bush was the first president
in modern history who had never vetoed a bill sent to him by Congress.
This extraordinary and peculiar circumstance, it has become increasingly
clear, was only in part related to Republican control of Congress
and the cowardice of the Democratic minority. In fact, the strategy
of the White House has been to foreclose the possibility of a
congressional override of a presidential veto, by simply signing
the legislation and then adding a signing statement
that essentially announced that he would do as he pleased in implementing
the laws.
In the past, signing statements were few and far between, and
almost always served symbolic, ceremonial or public relations
purposes. In the current administration, however, more than 800
of these statements have been issued, more than one for every
10 pieces of signed legislation. The signing statements are official
documents in which the White House presents its own legal interpretation
of the bill.
The statements serve not only to nullify specific provisions
of a billsuch as the postal bills simple restatement
of the prohibition on the opening of mail without a court warrant,
or the case of the amendment introduced by Arizona Senator John
McCain that prohibited torture against those in US custody. In
Orwellian fashion, the White House claims that nothing has happened.
Bush agrees with a law while announcing that he takes
it to mean the opposite of what it says.
The signing statements are also part of the administrations
longer-range goal of asserting presidential supremacy in relation
to Congress, and go a long way toward erecting the framework for
a police state and presidential dictatorship. In the five years
since the September 11, 2001, attacks, legislation like the Patriot
Act and the recent Military Commissions Act have been combined
with extralegal measures to roll back many of the restrictions
placed on government spying in the 1970s, in the aftermath of
the defeat of the US in Vietnam and the Watergate scandal. In
that period, congressional hearings exposed extensive illegal
government spying, including the opening of hundreds of thousands
of pieces of U.S. mail.
It is a virtual certainty that the Democratic leadership will
do nothing about the White Houses latest attacks on democratic
rights, just as they have supported the repressive measures of
the Patriot Act and confined themselves to empty statements of
concern over warrantless wiretapping.
See Also:
Bush signs Military
Commissions Act authorizing police-state tribunals torture
[18 October 2006]
A damning admission:
New York Times concealed NSA spying until after 2004 election
[22 August 2006]
US court rules NSA
spying program unconstitutional
Bush appeals decision and denounces judge
[19 August 2006]
US Congress moves
to sanction domestic spying
[10 August 2006]
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