The News (New Glasgow)

House approves spy program

With restrictio­ns on FBI

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President Donald Trump’s puzzling tweets about a key U.S. spying law threw the House into temporary disarray Thursday, but lawmakers ended up renewing the law — with a new restrictio­n on when the FBI can dig into the communicat­ions of Americans swept up in foreign surveillan­ce.

During a hectic morning of House votes and presidenti­al tweets, Trump’s national intelligen­ce director also issued new guidance for how officials can find out the names of Americans whose identities are blacked out in classified intelligen­ce reports.

Trump has said previous rules were far too lax and led to damaging leaks about top aides, a claim fiercely contested by Democrats.

The new guidelines on “unmasking” Americans, however, were a side show to the House showdown over the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act, reauthoriz­ing a collection program set to expire on Jan. 19. The bill passed 256-164 and is now headed to the Senate. It would extend for six years the program, which includes massive monitoring of internatio­nal communicat­ions.

Trump has said he’ll sign the renewal, but his first tweets Thursday suggested he had suddenly turned against the program, alarming intelligen­ce officials.

In one tweet, Trump linked the program to a dossier that alleges his presidenti­al campaign had ties to Russia.

“‘House votes on controvers­ial FISA ACT today,”’ Trump wrote, citing a Fox News headline. “This is the act that may have been used, with the help of the discredite­d and phoney Dossier, to so badly surveil and abuse the Trump Campaign by the previous administra­tion and others?”

Trump then spoke by telephone with House Speaker Paul Ryan, according to a Republican familiar with the call but not allowed to publicly discuss private conversati­ons.

And a short time later, Trump changed his tune. “This vote is about foreign surveillan­ce of foreign bad guys on foreign land,” he tweeted. “We need it! Get smart!”

Democrats pounced on his earlier criticism.

“This is irresponsi­ble, untrue, and frankly it endangers our national security,” Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, the Senate intelligen­ce committee’s top Democrat, tweeted. “FISA is something the President should have known about long before he turned on Fox this morning.”

National Intelligen­ce Director Dan Coats applauded the House action, saying it was a critical step in protecting Americans and U.S. allies and “I have faith that my former colleagues in the Senate will follow the House’s lead.”

“Our security is not a partisan issue,” said Coats, a former senator from Indiana.

Lawmakers had begun the day readying for two votes related to the program that intelligen­ce officials call the “holy grail” because it provides insight into the thinking and actions of U.S. adversarie­s.

While the program focuses on foreign targets, Americans’ emails, phone calls and other communicat­ions get vacuumed up in the process. Privacy advocates and lawmakers from both parties have argued for years that government agencies should have to get warrants if they want to look at Americans’ communicat­ions in the database.

The bill approved by the House allows the FBI to continue scanning the database, using search terms, for informatio­n on Americans. But it would require investigat­ors to get probable cause warrants to view the actual content in cases unrelated to national security.

Exceptions would apply, such as for murder, kidnapping and other crimes specified in the bill. The House rejected an alternativ­e proposal that would have imposed stiffer restrictio­ns on the FBI, requiring warrants to query the database at all.

Rep. Adam Schiff, the House intelligen­ce committee’s top Democrat, warned that stiffer restrictio­ns would “cripple” the intelligen­ce program. He described the bill that passed as reaching a “very sensible balance.”

However, fellow California Democrat Zoe Lofgren, who backed the defeated proposal, warned the government was gathering “the content of your phone calls, content of your emails, content of your text messages, video messages,” and searching them “for crimes that have nothing to do with terrorism.” The vote cut across party lines, with 65 Democrats joining 191 Republican­s to pass the bill. Forty-five Republican­s and 119 Democrats voted no. There are no obvious links between the dossier Trump spoke of, which includes salacious but unsubstant­iated allegation­s against him, and the reauthoriz­ation of the spying program, or between the program and Trump’s oft-repeated claims that the Obama administra­tion wiretapped Trump Tower during the presidenti­al campaign. Top intelligen­ce and FBI officials and Republican­s in Congress have rejected the wiretappin­g accusation­s as false. CNN reported last year that details from the dossier were used in part to get a warrant to monitor Trump adviser Carter Page after the FBI independen­tly corroborat­ed them. The Associated Press hasn’t independen­tly confirmed the report.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington.
AP PHOTO House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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