The Corner

Frustrated, Angry Republicans

All across Washington today, Republican frustration has shot off the scale after the successful filibuster in the Senate of the extension of the Patriot Act. First, Republicans I have talked to are angry at the four GOP senators who voted with Democrats to filibuster the Act — John Sununu, Larry Craig, Lisa Murkowski, and Chuck Hagel. “Disgusting,” said one Hill Republican. “Just disgusting.” More substantively, pro-Patriot Act Republicans are angry because they believe that if the Act is allowed to expire, key weapons in the war on terror will be lost. But Republicans are angry about more than just the Patriot Act. When the filibuster is viewed in context with some other recent developments — the Bush surrender on the treatment of terrorist detainees, today’s New York Times story on “secret” National Security Agency surveillance, and the Democrats’ continuing “Bush lied and people died” campaign against the administration’s conduct of the war on terror — a number of Republicans believe they are in a titanic struggle, not just against global terrorism, but against those in the United States who oppose the administration’s policies in the fight against global terrorism. And all of it comes against the backdrop of a stunning success in the Iraqi elections, in which pro-democratic forces were able to attract the participation of large numbers of Sunnis. Put it together, and today has been a day of great success and bitter anger for supporters of the Bush administration.

Byron York is a former White House correspondent for National Review.
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