Blue Herald
13
Dec
Good News
by QuestionGirl
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The incoming Democratic chairman of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee promised on Wednesday to combat what he denounced as President George W. Bush’s war-time trampling of American rights.

“We have a duty to repair real damage done to our system of government over the last few years,” Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont said in outlining his panel’s agenda for the 110th, Democratic-led Congress, which is set to convene on January 4.

“Americans’ privacy is a price the Bush administration is willing to pay for the cavalier way it is spawning new databanks. But privacy rights belong to the people, not to the government,” Leahy said.

Leahy made the comments in a speech entitled, “Ensuring Liberty and Security Through Checks and Balances,” to be delivered at the Georgetown University Law Center.

Leahy and other Democrats have complained about Bush’s tactics in the war on terror, particularly the Republican president’s warrantless domestic spying program that Democrats and some Republicans say violates the law.

Read more at Reuters


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