The Day

House OKs spy program, with caveat

Trump tweets about law sparked confusion Thursday

- By DEB RIECHMANN and JONATHAN LEMIRE

Washington — 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 phony 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!”

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