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Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Attorney General Hatch?

Among the more persistent Washington rumors has Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch replacing embattled Attorney General Alberto Gonzales. The rumor has had a pretty good shelf life despite consistent insistence from the White House that Gonzales isn’t going anywhere.

Today we got official word that Peter Carr, Hatch’s press secretary, is leaving that post to become deputy director of public affairs at the Department of Justice, the agency headed by the attorney general.

Obviously, this move puts Carr in place to continue to work with Hatch when the senator becomes the attorney general.

No, says Carr.

“I don’t expect him to,” Carr said when asked if his boss will follow him to Justice. “He says there’s no truth to the rumors.”

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FISA redux?

Harry%20Reid%20photo.jpgSenate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., all but admits today that it was a mistake to give the Bush White House expanded surveillance powers before lawmakers raced out of town earlier this month.

In a letter to Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman John Rockefeller, D-West Va., and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., Reid urges the chairmen to quickly pass new legislation this fall that “better serves American national security interests and comports with the Constitution and proper judicial and congressional oversight.”

Cutting to the chase of his letter: the rush to revamp the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act was too hurried and overlooked important constitutional considerations. Congressional oversight needed pronto.

“I know both of you share my disappointment at the process that led to passage of the recent law, and at the flawed outcome itself, which you and I and many others strongly opposed,” Reid wrote in the August 14 letter released this morning.

The temporary authorities in the new law will sunset in six months, Reid notes. During that time period, Reid said he would support all efforts by the Senate panels “to conduct vigorous and comprehensive oversight.”

The legislation was fast-tracked because the director of national intelligence expressed concerns about a hole in collecting intelligence about foreign terrorists and a new intelligence report discovered new threats in America.

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