Senator
Rand Paul of Kentucky, a Republican presidential contender, speaks at a
meet-and-greet in Philadelphia on May 18, where he vowed to do
“everything possible” to block renewal of the Patriot Act. Two days
later, Paul was in the U.S. Senate, delivering a 10-hour speech
condemning the NSA’s bulk data collection program.
Alejandro A. Alvarez/The Philadelphia Inquirer/AP
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It’s hard to find a person who likes working on Sunday. That’s especially true for senators.
And yet, on the last day of May, the Senate will
be in session because it has not been able to come to an agreement on
the Patriot Act, the 2001 law enacted in the wake of 9/11 and that civil
libertarians have long thought represented a government grab of
Americans’ rights.
At issue in the Senate is the extension of a
section of the act that gives the National Security Agency the authority
to sweep up the data associated with the billions of phone calls that
Americans make each day. It’s not tapes of actual calls, but the
“metadata” associated with them—who you called, how long you called,
where you called from. The extension expires on June 1.
Senator Rand Paul, the libertarian-leaning
Kentucky Republican, is vowing to stop the bill entirely—a threat he
reiterated the day before the Senate was due to return. “Tomorrow, I
will force the expiration of the NSA illegal spy program,” Paul said in a
statement Saturday. “I believe we must fight terrorism, and I believe
we must stand strong against our enemies. But we do not need to give up
who we are to defeat them. In fact, we must not.”
Paul vowed to use various procedural tactics to
push a vote past the midnight expiration deadline. The Senate session
starts at 4 p.m. on Sunday and the White House has said that the
program, which is already being dismantled in anticipation of Congress
not passing an extension, will lapse beginning at 8 p.m. Both the White
House and Republicans who favor the act’s extension have been warning
about national security implications if the program ceases to operate.
On Friday, President Barack Obama told reporters
in the Oval Office: “We’ve only got a few days. I don’t want us to be in
a situation in which for a certain period of time those authorities go
away, where suddenly we’re dark, and heaven forbid we have a problem
where we could have prevented a terrorist attack or apprehended someone
who engaged in dangerous activity, but we didn’t do so simply because of
inaction in the Senate.”
Paul’s move is part of a head-spinning alignment
of political forces. His stance against the act puts him on the opposing
side of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who called the Senate’s
rare Sunday session after being unable to overcome the opposition of
Democrats and libertarian-minded Republicans who blocked renewing
sections of the act and thus the spying program.
The standoff seemed to mark the end of a truce.
McConnell favored Paul’s opponent in the 2010 GOP Senate primary in
Kentucky, but since then they’ve had an uneasy alliance. Paul campaigned
hard for McConnell when he faced what at first seemed like a strong
Democratic challenge in 2014.
The unusual political alignment puts Paul closer
to Senate Democrats and House Republicans. The House has passed the
U.S.A. Freedom Act, which ends the NSA’s massive sweep of phone data.
Instead, their legislation requires law enforcement authorities to
obtain court approval to request phone records from telephone companies
on a case-by-case basis. The White House supports that measure, too. And
a majority of the Senate does as well. Paul doesn’t like that reform
measure because he believes it doesn’t go far enough and he voted
against it.
Making the situation tricky are internal Senate
rules. In the chamber where the once rare use of various procedures
requiring 60 votes has become commonplace, especially under McConnell
when he was the minority leader, it’s anyone’s guess how this turns out.
Even though the USA Freedom Act is supported by libertarian-leaning
Senate Republicans, Obama and House Republicans and Senate Democrats,
and even though it garnered a solid majority last week that could have
sent it to the president’s desk, it got jammed up by opponents using
60-vote tools to block it.
If that wasn’t complicated enough, Paul’s promise
to slow the process even more means that the Patriot Act provisions are
almost sure to expire tomorrow night—especially since the House would
need to sign on to any new bill.
For his part, McConnell seems determined to stay
the course. His efforts to pass a temporary extension of the current law
failed last week and he has limited options other than to try again to
persuade members to pass another stop-gap measure. Among McConnell’s
objections are that the House-passed, Obama-supported act wouldn’t
require the NSA to hold on to phone records.
Adding to the confusion is a recent court case out
of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second District in New
York that undercut many of the legal theories underpinning the mass
surveillance program. The three-judge panel that ruled on the case
didn’t overturn the NSA program, but it cast doubt on its statutory
foundation. “The statutes to which the government points have never been
interpreted to authorize anything approaching the breadth of the
sweeping surveillance at issue here,” the judges ruled. “The sheer
volume of information sought is staggering.”
All of this leaves Paul exactly where he’s most
comfortable, with the national spotlight on him and his presidential
campaign, making libertarian arguments that cut across party lines and
keeping the Senate in knots. It makes it worth coming to work on Sunday.
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