Two days after entering office, President Obama issued an
executive order announcing his intention to close the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba within one year. Obama's order called for a cabinet-level panel to grapple with issues including
what locations inside the United States prisoners might be moved to and which courts they could be tried in. But Obama's efforts hit a roadblock yesterday when the Senate voted
90 to 6 to approve an amendment barring the use of funds to transfer detainees to the U.S. Though Democrats in Congress are
supportive of closing Guantanamo, they said that they planned to "withhold the money
until the White House settles on a comprehensive plan for dealing with detainees." "The feeling was at this point
we were defending the unknown," said Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL). "We were asked to defend the plan that hasn't been announced," he said.
Ken Gude, the the Associate Director of the International Rights and Responsibility Program at the Center for American Progress,
explained to TalkingPointsMemo yesterday that "Congress, on the legislative calendar, got ahead of Obama on this." "It's the kind of problem you have when you have
two different tracks moving, but not at the same rate," Gude said. Though Republicans have responded to the move
with glee, Obama is not backing down from his pledge to close the prison. In a speech at the National Archives today, the president answered "
critics of his dismantling of Bush-era policies on detention and interrogation" and
urged "Congress to be patient while the administration explores options for relocating Guantanamo detainees."