Dayton Daily News

Senators threaten to block foreign surveillan­ce bill

One Republican rep calls the House bill ‘disgracefu­l.’

- By Richard Lardner

Two senators WASHINGTON — threatened Wednesday to oppose and, if necessary, block passage of House legislatio­n to reauthoriz­e a soonto-expire foreign intelligen­ce collection program.

The warning comes as Congress is trying to find the best way for ensuring that the program doesn’t lapse by year’s end. Senate Republican leaders are considerin­g adding a short-term extension to a government spending bill, which would allow Congress to take up revisions to the law early next year instead of hustling a bill through before lawmakers leave town for their holiday break at week’s end.

But the House is pressing for fast action on legislatio­n to allow the program to continue for four more years, a move Sens. Rand Paul, R-Ky., and Ron Wyden, D-Ore., are making clear they’ll fight. They have congressio­nal allies such as Sens. Mike Lee, R-Utah, and Rep. Justin Amash, R-Mich., and are backed by privacy advocates.

The lawmakers are demanding an open debate in Congress early next year that will lead to changes to the law to protect the communicat­ions of Americans swept up in electronic dragnets.

“I will actively oppose and filibuster any longterm extension of warrantles­s searches of American citizens,” Paul tweeted. “I’ll be right there with you,” Wyden tweeted in response.

The surveillan­ce program gives the U.S. government authority to spy on the electronic communicat­ions of foreigners located outside the United States. The informatio­n yields intelligen­ce that helps prevent terrorist plots, cyberattac­ks and other threats, according to U.S. intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t officials. The Trump administra­tion has pressed for a renewal of the law without changes.

Privacy advocates have pushed back, saying that informatio­n about Americans who are communicat­ing with these foreign targets is also being incidental­ly swept up and needs to be protected.

The House bill made public late Tuesday would extend the program, known as section 702 of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act, until 2021. The law is set to expire at the end of December.

A report accompanyi­ng the bill said the legislatio­n “also makes critical improvemen­ts to privacy and civil liberties while resulting in no negative operationa­l impact to United States’ surveillan­ce authoritie­s.” The bill, the report added, “strikes the appropriat­e balance between privacy and national security.”

But Amash called the House bill “disgracefu­l” and said he doubted House Republican leaders had the votes needed to pass it.

“When the government searches for informatio­n on Americans, that they get a warrant because under our Constituti­on that’s what’s required,” Amash said.

Two organizati­ons at opposite ends of the political spectrum, the conservati­ve FreedomWor­ks and the American Civil Liberties Union, issued statements Wednesday sharply critical of the House legislatio­n.

Adam Brandon, the president of FreedomWor­ks, said the House bill “is the exact opposite of reform, and is markedly worse than current law.” Brandon said the bill would expand “mass, warrantles­s surveillan­ce” and permit the U.S. government to use “American communicat­ions against them in court even when it has nothing to do with national security.”

ACLU legislativ­e counsel Neema Singh Guliani said House leaders seem “poised to repeat past mistakes and quickly push for a vote on this hastily drafted legislatio­n without giving members of Congress or the public time to debate the important privacy interests at stake.”

The Senate’s No. 2 Republican, John Cornyn of Texas, said Tuesday he anticipate­d the Senate would renew the program for several weeks by adding a provision to a temporary government spending bill. That would give Congress more time to sift through competing bills in the House and Senate to alter and reauthoriz­e the law.

“If I was a betting man, I would say that’s the most likely outcome at this moment,” Cornyn said.

 ??  ?? Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., says he will filibuster any long-term extension of warrantles­s searches of American citizens.
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., says he will filibuster any long-term extension of warrantles­s searches of American citizens.
 ??  ?? Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., says he will side with Rand Paul in opposition to the foreign intelligen­ce collection program.
Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., says he will side with Rand Paul in opposition to the foreign intelligen­ce collection program.

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