Do We Need A Whistleblower To Tell The World Which Senator Killed Whistleblower Protection Law?

from the or-are-they-too-scared dept

Last month, we mentioned that the Senate had given its approval to a new law protecting whistleblowers in the federal government. There were some problems with the bill, which led some to fight against it, but much of the bill was useful. With the whole Wikileaks stuff going on, there had been some concern that such a law might lead to similar leaks, but most of Congress recognized that protecting whistleblowers is important. Except for one anonymous Senator. Even though the bill had already passed the Senate. After the House took a bunch of stuff out of the bill, it went back to the Senate again, where an anonymous Senator put a hold on the bill, effectively killing it. It does seem kind of silly that a Senator can do this anonymously. Of course, we can hope that, in the long run, this will work out for the best. Perhaps sometime in the future Congress can pass a better bill that is actually much more protective of whistleblowers.

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Comments on “Do We Need A Whistleblower To Tell The World Which Senator Killed Whistleblower Protection Law?”

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22 Comments
Coward (Anon) says:

But sometimes it is used for good

Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon put a hold on the COICA (aka the Internet Blacklist bill) that prevented it from coming up for a vote in 2010. Given the money and leverage the AAs can bring to the table, the bill is likely to pass if voted on. But the anonymous aspect of the hold on the whistleblower bill seems not right. Either stand up for what you believe in or get out of the way.

Anonymous Coward says:

But sometimes it is used for good

One is worse than the other, but both are bad. No single senator ore representative should ever have power to completely stop legislation.

The reason we have 100 senators and multiple hundred representatives is so that everyone’s voice is heard equally and the majority opinion prevails. Allowing one person to stop legislation is literally giving that person power greater than the presidential veto (at least the president can be overruled).

Casey says:

But sometimes it is used for good

It is wrong that the majority view is supposed to prevail. The founding fathers were as distrustful of true democracy as they were of living in a monarchy. We are a representative republic. That rule was created so that legislation would NOT be pushed through the halls of government without being thoughtfully considered. The big issue with the American government is the people who hold power. Our politicians are in no way looking out for us and it is not one side or the other doing it, it is both.

Darryl says:

wikileaks is not a whistleblower, by its definition

None of this makes any difference to assange or wikileaks, and they do not fall under the definition of a whitleblower.

The US will ignore whistleblower laws, and change him on something more substantial.

Also, if you have been following international news regarding wikileaks, it is MOST CERTAINLY NOT, about how the US has responded to it. Or their reaction to it..

Most of the international news about wikileaks is about specific leaks, and how trivial they generally are.

It’s turned out to be very little ‘dirt’ some fluff and little substance. Certainly nothing to get really upset about, but regardless, assange will probably meet his cumuppense soon enough.. if he has not allready, but just does not know it yet.

He got his 15 minutes of fame, then some, his time has passed, it will be “what ever happend to him??” next. the reply will be ‘who cares !!’..

mdmadph (profile) says:

Re:

Probably, but does it honestly matter? I honestly think that such a club as the Senate sometimes gets together and decides which guy is going to be the “fall guy” (take the blame for opposing popular legislation that no one wants to be seen actively opposing but all have reservations against), even in situations where it’s done discretely, like this.

Chinese overlord (profile) says:

Senators bought and sold

Every senator and congressman is for sale to do the bidding of private industry. This is the American way, and part of the reason America is going down into the shitter. Good luck when the only thing left in America is lawyers, politicians and a giant debt which you can’t pay off.

I’d like to find out who this senator is and send them a big bag of shit to tell them my opinion of their vote.

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