When the Senate Judiciary Committee convenes next week to consider the president’s warrantless-search program, one Dem member will have a really good question for the attorney general.
Sen. Russell Feingold (D-Wis.) charged yesterday that Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales misled the Senate during his confirmation hearing a year ago when he appeared to try to avoid answering a question about whether the president could authorize warrantless wiretapping of U.S. citizens.
In a letter to the attorney general yesterday, Feingold demanded to know why Gonzales dismissed the senator’s question about warrantless eavesdropping as a “hypothetical situation” during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in January 2005. At the hearing, Feingold asked Gonzales where the president’s authority ends and whether Gonzales believed the president could, for example, act in contravention of existing criminal laws and spy on U.S. citizens without a warrant.
Gonzales said that it was impossible to answer such a hypothetical question but that it was “not the policy or the agenda of this president” to authorize actions that conflict with existing law. He added that he would hope to alert Congress if the president ever chose to authorize warrantless surveillance, according to a transcript of the hearing.
(Feingold has posted a statement and a copy of his letter to Gonzales.)
I suppose it’s possible that Gonzales will have some kind of creative defense for this, but Feingold’s observation seems pretty damaging. At the time of Gonzales’ testimony, there was nothing hypothetical about the inquiry — indeed, Gonzales had personally signed off on warrantless searches as White House counsel — and Gonzales didn’t come back to brief lawmakers on the surveillance.
Feingold said, “It now appears that the Attorney General was not being straight with the Judiciary Committee and he has some explaining to do.” Given the circumstances, that seems like an entirely fair assessment.
I suppose Feingold did the professional thing by sending this letter in advance, but part of me thinks it would have been far more entertaining if Feingold sprung this on Gonzales during the hearings. Gonzales might have asked for more time to review his earlier testimony, but it might have been a dramatic moment, right?