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Glenn Greenwald

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Glenn Greenwald (born 1967 in New York City) is an American attorney, best-selling author of How Would a Patriot Act?, and popular political and legal blogger, and columnist at Salon Magazine. He is often described by critics as a liberal blogger, and he is opposed to the policies of the Bush Administration, but he describes himself as neither liberal nor conservative. Indeed, he contends that "Bush followers are not conservatives".

Background

Greenwald is a graduate of George Washington University and received a J.D. from New York University Law School. He worked at the large New York law firm of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz both before and briefly after he joined the New York bar in 1995. He left to co-found the law firm of Greenwald Christoph & Holland, now Greenwald Christoph. He litigated several cases with constitutional issues.

Greenwald is openly gay and splits his time between Brazil and New York City. He explains that this is because Brazil recognizes his same-sex relationship with his Brazilian partner, while the United States does not.

Unclaimed Territory

Greenwald started a blog, "Unclaimed Territory", in October 2005, focusing initially on the Valerie Plame affair and the investigation of Scooter Libby. When the NSA warrantless surveillance controversy became known two months later, he shifted primary attention to that. He quickly became known as a prominent legal critic of the George W. Bush administration. He has written in American Conservative magazine and appeared as a guest on C-Span's Washington Journal, Air America's Majority Report and Public Radio International's To the Point. His reporting and analysis have been cited in the The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, Slate, and Salon. In April 2006, he was given a 2005 Koufax Award for Best New Blog. He wrote the New York Times best selling book, How Would a Patriot Act?. Pre-orders placed the book at #1 on Amazon.com in less than 24 hours, where it stayed for several days.

Greenwald attracted national media attention in January 2006 when he announced on his blog his finding that U.S. Senator Mike DeWine had proposed an easier standard for domestic eavesdropping by federal agents in 2002, but the administration had declined any interest in the legislation and advised him that it would probably be unconstitutional, a direct contradiction of much of the later rationale for the NSA warrantless domestic spying program once it was known. This discovery became widely covered by the national media, which often credited Greenwald for breaking the story. For example, The Washington Post reported:

The Bush administration rejected a 2002 Senate proposal that would have made it easier for FBI agents to obtain surveillance warrants in terrorism cases, concluding that the system was working well and that it would likely be unconstitutional to lower the legal standard. ...

Democrats and national security law experts who oppose the NSA program say the Justice Department's opposition to the DeWine legislation seriously undermines arguments by Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales and others, who have said the NSA spying is constitutional and that surveillance warrants are often too cumbersome to obtain.

"It's entirely inconsistent with their current position," said Philip B. Heymann, a deputy attorney general in the Clinton administration who teaches law at Harvard University. "The only reason to do what they've been doing is because they wanted a lower standard than 'probable cause.' A member of Congress offered that to them, but they turned it down." ...

The DeWine amendment — first highlighted this week by Internet blogger Glenn Greenwald and widely publicized yesterday by the Project on Government Secrecy, an arm of the Federation of American Scientists — is the latest point of contention in a fierce political and legal battle over the NSA monitoring program.'

U.S. Senator Russ Feingold quoted Greenwald's blog on the floor of the Senate when he introduced Senate Resolution 398, to censure President Bush.

Greenwald is currently working on his second book, which is "an examination of Bush's presidency with an emphasis on his personality traits and beliefs that drove the presidency (along with an emphasis on how and why those personality traits have led to a presidency that has failed to historic proportions)".

On February 1, 2007, Greenwald announced that he was moving his blog to Salon Magazine, where he would also be a contributing writer.


References

  1. Bush followers are not conservatives, Unclaimed Territory blog posting, January 16, 2006.
  2. http://glenngreenwald.blogspot.com/2006/07/response-to-right-wing-personal.html
  3. Good book news, Unclaimed Territory blog posting, June 1, 2006
  4. White House Dismissed '02 Surveillance Proposal, Dan Eggen, Washington Post, Thursday, January 26, 2006 (page A04).
  5. http://www.fednews.com/transcript.htm?id=20060328t3970 Fednews.com (subscription required)
  6. http://www.haloscan.com/comments/glenngreenwald/116307161281500794/#54519
  7. Greenwald, Glenn (1 February 2007). "Blog News". Unclaimed Territory. Retrieved 2007-02-02. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)

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