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A top House Democratic leader says Americans no longer fear bringing terrorist suspects from Guantanamo Bay detention center to the United States, a shift in public opinion that he says will fuel the defeat of Republican measures to block the transfers.
Rep. Chris Van Hollen, special assistant to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, said he knows Democrats likely will have to go on the record with votes supporting the Obama administration's decision to send five accused Sept. 11 terror plotters being held at the Navy base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to federal court in New York City.
The Maryland Democrat said it is a stance bolstered by Americans' faith in the U.S. justice system as opposed to what he called "fear mongering" on the other side of the aisle.
Republicans are expected to force a vote on terror-suspect transfers as part of the fiscal 2010 spending bill for the Departments of Commerce and Justice, which Democratic leaders put on hold last week, and on the fiscal 2010 Intelligence Authorization Act, which is ready for a floor vote but has languished for months.
"The American people don't run scared," said Mr. Van Hollen, who also serves as chairman of the House Democrats' campaign arm, adding that caucus members have not come to him with concerns about how a vote on detainee transfers would play in their home districts.
"This was an argument that was driven largely by people who were trying to politicize this issue and engage in fear-mongering," Mr. Van Hollen said. "What's happened is a lot of members have gone back to their constituents and found out that the fear-mongering did not succeed in scaring their constituents. … Their constituents want to see these people brought to justice, and they have confidence in our system."
He said he wondered what Republicans "are afraid of."
House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer, Maryland Democrat, acknowledged he had worries about votes on Guantanamo Bay detainees but said he was convinced that ultimately a bipartisan majority would support "bringing of these very bad criminals to justice in a way consistent with the values of this country."
Critics say moving terror suspects to the United States poses security risks and civilian trials threaten to expose intelligence-gathering techniques and shower publicity upon accused terrorists, including confessed Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, who is among the five slated for a New York trial.
Some of those fears were confirmed Monday by a New York Times report that the lawyer for the five accused plotters said they planned to plead not guilty "so they can have a trial and try to get their message out."









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