Oct. 10, 2007 – 11:02 p.m.
The public was kept out of a House Intelligence Committee markup Wednesday despite the fact that a portion of the meeting was officially “open.”
Which is interesting because last fall — when Republicans still controlled the House — Democrats complained mightily when a committee markup of surveillance legislation that was supposed to be open was closed and conducted under a “cloak of secrecy,” as they charged at the time.
Fast-forward to Wednesday. Democrats held a closed committee markup at which, coincidentally, another bill addressing surveillance law (
Both last year’s and Thursday’s markups were held in the Intelligence panel’s special, secure meeting room on the top floor of the Capitol, where all meetings are closed to the public regardless of content.
Kira Maas, a spokeswoman for Intelligence Chairman
The panel, however, has yet to provide a transcript of portions of a May markup of the fiscal 2008 intelligence authorization bill (


