QUICKLINK   Washington, D.C. · December 3, 2009 · Reporter's privilege

Federal shield legislation delayed by amendment process

Keywords: Federal shield law; reporters privilege; Shield Law

Share:
· Facebook
· LinkedIn
· Email
Print
Link

Senate Judiciary Committee members agreed today to decide on a timeframe for considering any final amendments to the proposed federal media shield law, possibly setting time limits on discussion of the amendments.

The bill's sponsor, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., proposed at today's markup hearing that senators, including Arlen Specter, D-Pa., Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., and Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, meet to agree on a strict time limit to consider each possible amendment before the committee's next business meeting.The committee has still to consider at least 26 amendments to the bill before it can vote.

Schumer has previously said he would be wiling to invoke Senate Rule XIV, which could allow the legislation to bypass the committee and move to the Senate floor, and Chairman Leahy said he would not object to bypassing the committee if the senators could not reach a consensus.

In past weeks, the bill has stalled in committee as senators opposed to portions of it, including Kyl and Sessions, discussed their concerns at length. Bill sponsors, with the support of the Obama administration, have been pushing to have a committee vote on the legislation as it stands.

Cristina Abello, 6:15 pm · Comments: 0


Submit a comment

Name (what you want displayed):

Comment:

Please note: comments with hyperlinks will be rejected.

Email (only if you want to be notified of new comments):



Reporters Committee home

Send comments & tips

Subscribe by email

RSS feed

Follow us on Twitter

Find us on Facebook


News categories:

Broadcasting

Freedom of information

Intellectual property

Internet regulation

Libel

Newsgathering

Prior restraints

Privacy

Reporter's privilege

Secret courts

State open government


News keywords:

[list alphabetically]

Public Records

Shield Law

Subpoenas

Open Records

Confidential source issues

Defamation

E-mail

Sealed records

FOIA

Legislation

Internet

Sealed cases

Lawsuits

Secrecy

White House

FOIA reform

Police

Privacy

Libel

reporters privilege

List all keywords




Search:

Limit by date:

Fr:

To:

Category

Sort by
relevance
date