House defeats stopgap extension of spy program
By Richard Cowan and Jeremy Pelofsky
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In a victory for President George W. Bush, the House of Representatives on Wednesday defeated a Democratic bid to temporarily extend an expiring spy law instead of replacing it with a new measure that also would immunize telephone companies from lawsuits.
Working against a Saturday deadline when the Protect America Act expires, the House voted 229-191 against a 21-day extension. Thirty-four Democrats joined with Republicans to defeat the bill.
Hours before the vote, Bush vowed to veto what would have been a second short-term extension of the bill.
He pushed for House passage of a bill approved by the Senate on Tuesday that would replace the law and shield from lawsuits phone companies that cooperated with the warrantless surveillance program he secretly began after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.
House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer stood firm in opposing to Senate bill. If the law expires it would not undermine national security despite Republican warnings to the contrary, the Maryland Democrat said.
Hoyer noted the administration could extend ongoing surveillance operations for one year and begin new ones with court orders.
While final decisions were not made, Hoyer said he did not expect to bring another extension to the House for a vote.
Bush told reporters it was time to end the debate, vowing: "I will not accept any temporary extension." Continued...








