In a rare U.S. Senate session on Sunday, Rand Paul, the
Republican senator from Kentucky unilaterally prevented that body from temporarily
extending the Patriot Act which expired on the same day. Both the House of Representatives and
President Obama had supported an extension.
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Dome of the U.S. Capitol Building |
Approval by Congress and the Administration to extend the
Patriot Act would have allowed time for Congress to amend it or to write a new
law to replace it, but Rand scuttled that proposal through procedural maneuvering.
He was criticized for that by his colleagues, many of whom
simply walked out of the Senate Chamber when he rose to speak. Rand admitted that he will eventually lose
his fight on this issue. Senator John
McCain accused him of posturing to gain favor in his bid for the GOP
Presidential nomination.
The Patriot Act was enacted shortly after the infamous Osama
bin Laden-inspired 9/11 attacks on American soil.
Although a U.S. Court had struck down Section 215 of the
Patriot Act which permitted the collection of telephone billing records by the National
Security Agency, it nevertheless wisely permitted the U.S. Congress to extend the entirety
of that law while working to revise it or to enact new legislation in
cooperation with the White House.
After Rand obstructed Senate action, Obama’s Press
Secretary, Josh Earnest, embarrassingly explained that U.S. Security Agencies
will be employing “workaround tools”
until this problem is resolved. He
appeared unpersuasive, as he tried to assure the American people that homeland
security will not be jeopardized during the interim.