About a month ago, Bush shifted gears on congressional hearings over his warrantless-search program. After the White House had resisted the very idea of hearings for about a month, Bush said he welcomed congressional oversight and said hearings would be “good for democracy.” There was, of course, a catch.
“Just so long as the hearings, as they explore whether or not I had the prerogative to make the decision I make, doesn’t tell the enemy what we’re doing. See, that’s the danger.”
The idea was that the White House would tolerate Senate hearings into the controversy, but would only address legal issues surrounding administration authority, not practical or implementation questions that could reveal details of the domestic surveillance program.
And yet, a month after Bush acknowledged that the Senate can explore Bush’s legal authorities, the administration has taken yet another position: internal legal opinions on the spying program are off-limits.
The Bush administration is rebuffing requests from members of the Senate Judiciary Committee for its classified legal opinions on President Bush’s domestic spying program, setting up a confrontation in advance of a hearing scheduled for next week, administration and Congressional officials said Wednesday.
The Justice Department is balking at the request so far, administration officials said, arguing that the legal opinions would add little to the public debate because the administration has already laid out its legal defense at length in several public settings.
But the legality of the program is known to have produced serious concerns within the Justice Department in 2004, at a time when one of the legal opinions was drafted. Democrats say they want to review the internal opinions to assess how legal thinking on the program evolved and whether lawyers in the department saw any concrete limits to the president’s powers in fighting terrorism.
Once again, Congress faces a decision: do their duty or roll over for the White House. Again.
Senator Arlen Specter, the Pennsylvania Republican who leads the panel, said Wednesday that he had “a lot of questions” the administration had not yet adequately answered about the program’s legal rationale.
Mr. Specter would not address the committee’s request for the classified legal opinions, except to say, “that’s not a closed matter — we’re still working on that.”
Work fast, Arlen, hearings start next week.
Asked whether the classified legal opinions would be made available to Congress, a senior Justice Department official said Wednesday, “I don’t think they’re coming out.” We’ll see.