-Caveat Lector-

Getting the Most Out of Homeland Security

Mark Weisbrot, AlterNet
November 21, 2002


In a final burst of shameless opportunism for the legislative year
2002, the President and his party pushed their "homeland security"
bill through Congress. The bill was laden with pork and gifts to
special interests. Among the most ostentatious was a reward for
corporations who found security far from their homeland: those who
had set up foreign headquarters (sometimes little more than a
mailbox in a tax haven like Bermuda) in order to evade US taxes
would be made eligible for government contracts.

The legislation also grants the President broad powers to deny up to
170,000 federal workers their collective bargaining rights and civil
service protections in the newly created Department of Homeland
Security. The Republicans were able to intimidate Congressional
Democrats which is about as difficult these days as intimidating the
average squirrel on the Capitol grounds by threatening to portray
them as obstructing necessary security measures. According to the
pundits and pollsters that interpret these events, the Democrats had
already lost two seats and their Senate majority because they had
been tainted in this way. So how could they put up a fight?

But the Democrats got rolled on this legislation, as in the election
generally, because they allowed President Bush to frame the issue
dishonestly. It didn’t help that most of the media went along for
the ride. Mr. Bush was never forced to answer why he might need to
revoke the rights of federal workers. There are unionized employees
in the Department of Defense as well as other agencies that contain
employees who will be moved to the new Department of Homeland
Security. No one, including the President, has made the case that
collective bargaining has impaired the functioning of these
agencies.

Mr. Bush did claim that union opposition to having customs officials
wear radiation detectors could delay the implementation of this
security measure for "a long period of time." This turned out to be
a fabrication, as the issue had already been settled. Yet in this
increasingly Orwellian society where Ignorance is Truth and Homeland
Security is freedom, those who were blatantly exploiting the
security issue to advance their agenda were able to portray their
Democratic opponents as holding up national security legislation for
the sake of "special interests."

As it turned out, three of the most outrageous special interest
clauses attached by House Republicans to the Homeland Security bill
were too far over the top for even their Republican Senate
colleagues. These included the federal contracts provision for tax
evaders; special protection from lawsuits for pharmaceutical
companies; and the establishment of a new research center for
domestic security issues, which was expected to be placed at Texas
A&M University (favored by powerful Republicans).

Facing a revolt from within, the Senate Republican leadership
extracted a promise from their House counterparts that Congress
would change these provisions next year. It remains to be seen if
this promise will be kept. In the meantime the Bush administration
has announced another assault on federal workers, threatening to
privatize the operations that employ as much as half the Federal
government’s civilian labor force, up to 850,000 employees. Once
again, the Administration has offered no evidence or plan to show
how this would increase efficiency or save the taxpayers’ money.

But out-sourcing government services will provide lucrative
contracts for some of the Administration’s corporate friends and
contributors. Those who remember the Republicans’ proposals to
partially privatize Social Security will see a pattern here. The
individual accounts they wanted to create would have at least 15
times the administrative costs as the present system, and drain
needed tax revenue from the system. But there was a payoff—for the
Wall Street financial firms that would manage the accounts.

Senator Lincoln Chaffee, a Republican from Rhode Island, told the
press that most senators were outraged at some of the provisions
attached to the Homeland Security bill. "It was a question for me
how arrogant we were going to be after we have the White House and
both houses of Congress. Do we just assume that might makes right
and anything goes?"

Well, maybe. If they can get away with it.

http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=14604

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