MCLU Blasts Sen. Susan Collins for Pandering to the Bush Administration and Selling Mainers’ Privacy Down the River (2/29/2008)
Portland, ME – The Maine Civil
Liberties Union condemned a letter sent by Senator Susan Collins today that
attempts to pressure Governor John Baldacci into complying with the federal Real
ID Act against the will of the people and legislature of Maine.
“Maine was right to reject Real ID,” said MCLU
Executive Director Shenna Bellows. “For Senator Collins to ask the
Governor to defy our state law is an insult to Maine’s elected officials – and
to ordinary Mainers, whose privacy will be sacrificed to this costly, misguided
program.”
Last year Maine passed a law against participating in
the federal program, citing its enormous cost and concern about the impact on
Mainers’ privacy and civil liberties. The Real ID Act would turn
Maine’s driver’s license into a national ID
card, facilitate the collection of vast amount of personal information about
Maine
residents, and expose them to government snooping and identity theft.
Maine was the
first state to openly reject the Real ID Act, and 16 other states followed its
example in 2007. The Department of Homeland Security has sought to cajole
states to comply with the law by offering them an extension of its deadline if
they ask for a waiver. Although, as Senator Collins points out in her
letter, seeking such a waiver does not necessarily commit a state to complying
with Real ID, the Department of Homeland Security has portrayed other states
that have requested an extension as submitting to the program.
“It is clear from this letter that Senator Collins is
more interested in carrying water for the Department of Homeland Security than
protecting the privacy of her constituents,” said Bellows. “Maine’s action last year
inspired many other states to reject Real ID. Now is the time for those
states to stand together and hold firm, not cave in to bullying from the Bush
Administration.”
A copy of the letter is available upon
request.
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