No secret law in the Constitution!
WASHINGTON - May 13, 2008 - On April 30,
the Senate's subcommittee on the Constitution held a vitally important hearing
on "Secret Law and the Threat to Democratic and Accountable
Government," chaired by Sen. Russell Feingold (D-Wis). At issue, ignored
by the presidential contenders, is a profound change in the very core of our
laws.
Witness Steven Aftergood, secrecy expert
at the Federation of American Scientists, said growing use of secret law
"is implicated in fundamental political controversies over domestic
surveillance, torture and many other issues directly affecting the lives and
interests of Americans. ... Secret law excludes the public from the
deliberative process, promotes arbitrary and deviant government behavior, and
shields official malefactors from accountability."
At this very Senate hearing, John R. Elwood, the Office of Legal Counsel's
deputy assistant attorney general, provided a startling example of the Bush
regime's justification for the imperious essence of secret law. As reported in the
May 1, 2008 New York Times, Elwood "disclosed a previously
unpublicized method to cloak government activities."
The Bush regime believes, he said, "that the president could ignore or
modify existing executive orders that he and other presidents have issued
without disclosing the new interpretation."
Vladimir Putin would agree with that - but is this America? Responding to
Elwood (and his boss, U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey), Sen. Sheldon
Whitehouse (D-R.I) said that this three-card-Monte game (a sidewalk swindle)
"turns the Federal Register (that prints these orders) into a screen of
falsehoods." Behind the "phony regulations, lawless programs can
operate in secret."
Since September 11, 2001, the president often says that his actions are based
on legal opinions from the U.S. Justice Department, particularly from its
Office of Legal Counsel. Another witness before the Senate subcommittee on the
Constitution was Dawn Johnsen, former head of the Office of Legal Counsel.
Concerning secret interpretations of not only executive orders but also of
laws, she said the central question is, "May the Office of Legal Counsel
issue binding opinions that, in essence, tell the president and the executive
branch that they need not comply with existing laws - and then not share those
opinions, and that legal reasoning, with Congress or the American people? This
combination of claimed authority not to comply with the law and to do so
secretly is a terrible abuse of powers, without limits and without checks. It clearly
is antithetical to our constitutional democracy."
Is the next president willing to continue this degree and extent of kingly
secrecy, in which the Justice Department will be deeply complicit?
And my direct question to Republican John McCain: Will he continue Mukasey as
U.S. Attorney General, who has yet to utter a critical word about George W.
Bush's unprecedented expansion of presidential powers that is nurtured by
"secret law?"
In his Senate testimony, Aftergood zeroed in on the powerful Office of Legal
Counsel, whose opinions, he noted, are "generally binding on the executive
branch. Many of these opinions may be properly confidential. But others
interpret the law authoritatively and in ways that are reflected in government
policy."
Aren't the American people entitled to know what these authoritative opinions
are that affect our lives including our security in so many ways? But Aftergood
cautions us that "most of these opinions are secret, so that the legal
standards under which the government is actually operating at any given moment
may be unknown to the public."
One of the charges against King George III in the Declaration of Independence
was, "altering fundamentally the Forms of our Governments."
The oath of Allegiance for New Citizens requires, "I will support and
defend the Constitution and the laws of the United States against all enemies,
foreign and domestic... and bear true faith and allegiance to the same."
How can that oath be honored if American citizens, new and old, do not know
"the legal standards under which the government is actually operating at
any given moment?"