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Bush Warns Congress, Democrats On Homeland Security

U.S. President Bush derided Senate Democrats for hampering his efforts at creating a cabinet-level Homeland security department

TRENTON , New Jersey , September 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - U.S. President George W. Bush warned Monday, September 23, he will veto legislation creating a “Department of Homeland Security” unless it grants him sweeping new powers to hire and fire employees.

“I will not saddle this administration and future administrations with allowing the United States Senate to micro-manage the process. The enemy is too quick for that,” the president said during a daylong visit here, saying the dispute over labor rights threatened to leave America unprepared to “take the enemy on.”

Last Thursday at a meeting of the Republican Governors Association, Bush said, “The Senate wants to take away some of the powers of the administrative branch…The Senate wants to micromanage the process. And I'm not going to let them do it.”

And Saturday, Bush derided the U.S. Senate for pushing for labor rights, calling their efforts “to fight against terror threats with one hand tied behind its back.”

In a national radio address the same day, Bush asserted, “One way for the Congress to protect the American people is to pass legislation creating a new department of homeland security…Yet, after three weeks, the Senate has still not passed a bill I can sign.”

After battling opposition Democrats’ plans to create of a Cabinet-level Department of Homeland Security in the wake of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, Bush earlier this year unveiled his own version of the plan.

And he has repeatedly warned that he will veto any legislation that does not exempt the umbrella department's estimated 170,000 employees from labor protections enjoyed by most federal workers, a move Democrats - historically close to organized labor - oppose.

“We must be flexible, we must be strong, we must be ready to take the enemy on anywhere he decides to hit us, whether it’s America or anywhere else in the globe,” the president said here.

Bush, who has praised the Republican-held House of Representatives for approving his blueprint, urged the Democrat-held Senate to adopt a compromise measure offered by Republican Phil Gramm and Democrat Zell Miller.

“It’s a bill I can accept. It’s a bill that will make America more secure. And anything less than that is a bill which I will not accept,” said the president to about 2,000 people gathered in a flag-adorned airport hangar at a New Jersey Army National Guard facility.

The Department of Homeland Security, as envisioned by the White House and House members, will have more than 170,000 employees and an annual budget of $38 billion.

It will take over the Coast Guard, Secret Service, Border Patrol and Federal Emergency Management Agency among other services.

In his nationally broadcast radio address on Saturday, Bush deplored the Democrats’ version for what he called a “cumbersome” five-month waiting period to allow for background checks before department employees could be hired and an 18-month grace period before employees could be fired.

“Even worse, the Senate bill would weaken my existing authority to prohibit collective bargaining when national security is at stake. Every president since Jimmy Carter has had this very narrow authority throughout the government, and I need this authority in the war on terror,” he said.

Democrats, however, maintain their concern for federal government employees, saying Bush’s real motive is to strip civil service and collective bargaining protections from federal employees.

Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman (CT) said that Bush already has the freedom to temporarily waive collective bargaining and other rights on national security grounds.

And Senate Majority Leader Thomas A. Daschle (D-S.D.) warned that too much flexibility would take the federal workforce back to an era when people were hired and fired based on party affiliation and other arbitrary reasons, reports the Washington Post.

“This is basically a question of accountability and making sure we never go back to the politics of a federal workforce we saw in the bad old days,” he said. “I don’t want to see someone fired because they’re a Republican or a Democrat.”

 

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