[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 86 (Monday, June 1, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S3374]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL SECURITY LEGISLATION
Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, we are here because the Senate is not
functioning. We were here last night because the Senate is not
functioning. Oh, it is functioning according to the rules, which say
that you have to go through this arcane procedure of cloture on the
motion to proceed and get 60 votes before you can ever get to the bill.
Once you get to the bill, then you file another motion for cloture. The
Senate rules say that there are 30 hours that have to run unless, as
has been typical of Senate business, there is comity, there is
understanding, and there is bipartisanship. But one Senator can
withhold unanimous consent, and that has been done--so the 30 hours.
Now, normally that may be standard procedure for the Senate, but it
is getting in the way of our national security. At midnight last night
the law that allows our intelligence community to track the emails and
the phone calls of the terrorists evaporated. It won't be reenacted
until sometime later this week because of the lack of unanimous
consent.
But this Senator from Florida is not putting it at the feet of just
the one Senator who is withholding the unanimous consent. This Senator
from Florida is saying that this should have been planned on over a
week ago. This Senator is saying that we should have gone through the
laborious procedures--not assuming that we were going to have the votes
last night, not assuming that there was going to have comity and
unanimous consent. This Senator thinks that we should have done this
because of the urgency of national security.
It is interesting that this Senator from Florida comes to the floor
with mixed feelings. I voted for the Leahy bill, which is identical to
the House bill, but I did that because we didn't have any other choice.
When I had another choice, I voted for Senator Burr's--the chairman of
the Senate Intelligence Committee--version, which was to continue
existing law. I did so because I clearly thought that was in the
interests of our national security.
But since that is not the prevailing vote of the Senate, we need to
get on with it and pass the House bill. Then I would urge the chairman
of the Intelligence Committee, who is on the floor, that--down the
line--the 6-month transitional period from the old law to the new law
be extended with a greater transition time to 12 or 18 months. I would
further urge the chairman of the Intelligence Committee that as to a
major flaw in the bill passed by the House, which we will eventually
pass this week, we add to it a requirement for a certain amount of time
that the telephone companies would have to keep those telephone
business records, so that if there is an urgency of national security
going through the FISA Court, those records would be available to the
intelligence community to trace the telephone calls of the terrorists.
That would be my recommendation, and I see the chairman nodding in
somewhat agreement.
I hope we will get on. I hope better hearts and minds will prevail
and that we can collapse this period of darkness where there is no law
governing emails, phone calls, cell phones, et cetera, as we try to
protect ourselves from the terrorists.
I would hope that this would be collapsed into a much shorter time
instead of having to wait until late Tuesday or Wednesday or Thursday
of this week.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from North Carolina.
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