Indefinite detention amendment to be voted on soon [update: PASSED 67-29]

This amendment isn't going to solve anything because it is ambiguous. However, we weren't expecting to repeal Section 1021 of NDAA anyways because the House didn't pass their amendment and there's no support for it in the Senate. This was just to get a debate and hopefully get more people to support it in the next Congress or have the courts rule on it.
 
It's small, but it's still an example of what bipartisanship can produce when it's for the right reason.
 
Why did Graham change his vote? :confused:

Worried about being primaried? That clip of him from last year's NDAA debate where he shouts about not allowing detainees access to an attorney looks pretty bad. Maybe he and McCain are going to come up with another amendment to water this one down?
 
Worried about being primaried? That clip of him from last year's NDAA debate where he shouts about not allowing detainees access to an attorney looks pretty bad. Maybe he and McCain are going to come up with another amendment to water this one down?

No. Graham thinks this amendment authorizes indefinite detention. He didn't vote for it because he changed his views on detention.
 
No. Graham thinks this amendment authorizes indefinite detention. He didn't vote for it because he changed his views on detention.

But he didn't believe that before right? He was opposing it yesterday. Was the amendment changed today? I've been on the road most of the day today so I'm just catching up on this.
 
But he didn't believe that before right? He was opposing it yesterday. Was the amendment changed today? I've been on the road most of the day today so I'm just catching up on this.

The amendment was not changed. He opposed it but Levin made an argument on the floor that this amendment authorizes indefinite detention and was able to change Graham's mind. They both still support indefinite detention though.
 
The amendment was not changed. He opposed it but Levin made an argument on the floor that this amendment authorizes indefinite detention and was able to change Graham's mind. They both still support indefinite detention though.

Ok. Thanks for clarifying that.
 
The amendment was not changed. He opposed it but Levin made an argument on the floor that this amendment authorizes indefinite detention and was able to change Graham's mind. They both still support indefinite detention though.

It wasn't changed? I thought there was an amendment to it that Feinstein approved. No?
 
DId anyone hear how Cornyn and Hutchinson voted? Or is their a breakdown yet of who made up the yeas and nays?
 
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