Representative Heather A. Wilson, the New Mexico Republican and committee member who called for the investigation last week, said the review "will have multiple avenues, because we want to completely understand the program and move forward."We have a President who broke the law. The White House has basically acknowledged that and thumbed their noses at Congress. And, why not? House and Senate GOPers have no independent thoughts. Rove programs them. They have no sense of their constitutional obligation to be a separate branch of government. That's reason enough for them to lose control of Congress.
But an aide to Representative Peter Hoekstra, the Michigan Republican who leads the committee, said the inquiry would be much more limited in scope, focusing on whether federal surveillance laws needed to be changed and not on the eavesdropping program itself.
At the same time, the Senate Intelligence Committee put off a vote on conducting its own investigation after the White House, reversing course, agreed to open discussions about changing federal surveillance law. Senate Democrats accused Republicans of bowing to White House pressure.
For weeks, the Bush administration has been strongly resisting calls from Democrats and some Republicans for a full review into the National Security Agency's surveillance program, saying that such inquiries were unnecessary and risked disclosing sensitive national security information that could help Al Qaeda.
Hannity chops video to turn Obama quote upside down
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So here's the basic story: President Obama sat down for an interview with
Fox News (guh!), and Major Garrett asked him why he couldn't admit the West
won...
9 minutes ago




