The Sentinel-Record

Senate narrowly rejects new limits on internet surveillan­ce

- MARY CLARE JALONICK AND ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — The Senate came one vote short Wednesday of approving a proposal to prevent federal law enforcemen­t from obtaining internet browsing informatio­n or search history without seeking a warrant.

The bipartisan amendment won a solid majority of the Senate but just shy of the 60 votes needed for adoption. The 59-37 vote to allow such warrantles­s searches split both parties, with Republican­s and Democrats voting for and against.

The amendment’s authors, Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon and Republican Sen. Steve Daines of Montana, have long opposed the expansion and renewal of surveillan­ce laws that the government uses to track and fight terrorists. They say the laws can infringe on people’s rights.

“Should law-abiding Americans have to worry about their government looking over their shoulders from the moment they wake up in the morning and turn on their computers to when they go to bed at night?” Wyden asked. “I believe the answer is no. But that’s exactly what the government has the power to do without our amendment.”

The amendment vote came as the Senate considered renewal of three surveillan­ce provisions that expired in March before

Congress left due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. The legislatio­n is a bipartisan, House-passed compromise that has the backing of President Donald Trump, Attorney General William Barr and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. It would renew the authoritie­s and impose new restrictio­ns to try and appease civil liberties advocates.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., encouraged senators to vote against Wyden and Daines’ amendment, saying the legislatio­n was already a “delicate balance.” He warned changing it could mean the underlying provisions won’t be renewed.

“We cannot let the perfect become the enemy of the good when key authoritie­s are currently sitting expired and unusable,” McConnell said on the Senate floor before the vote.

The House passed the compromise legislatio­n shortly before the chamber left town two months ago. But McConnell couldn’t find enough support to approve the measure in the Senate, and instead passed a simple extension of the surveillan­ce laws. Pelosi never took that legislatio­n up, and McConnell is trying again to pass the House bill this week.

“The attorney general and members of Congress have worked together to craft a compromise solution that will implement needed reforms while preserving the core national security tools,” McConnell said. “These intense discussion­s have produced a strong bill that balances the need for accountabi­lity with our solemn obligation to protect our citizens and defend our homeland.”

It’s unclear if McConnell will be able to get the votes for final passage today. The close outcome on the Wyden and Daines amendment indicates that a majority of the Senate would like to see the House legislatio­n changed to better protect civil liberties.

An aide to Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., said after the vote that she would have supported the amendment if she had been present — meaning it would have passed. Murray was in her home state and will be present for today’s vote, said the aide, who declined to be identified and was granted anonymity to share the senator’s thinking.

Julian Sanchez, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, a think tank, said it was striking that the amendment failed by only one vote and said the vote total would have been “inconceiva­ble” five years ago. “It suggests a sea change in attitudes” following revelation­s in problems with how the FBI has used its secret surveillan­ce powers, Sanchez said. “It goes to the sort of collapse in trust in the intelligen­ce community to deploy these authoritie­s in a restrained way.”

The Senate did adopt a amendment by Republican Sen. Mike Lee of Utah and Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont that would boost third-party oversight to protect individual­s in some surveillan­ce cases. If the Senate passes the legislatio­n with that amendment intact, the bill would then have to go back to the House for approval instead of to the president’s desk for signature.

A third amendment by Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, a Republican who is a longtime skeptic of surveillan­ce programs, is expected to be considered today before a final vote. Paul’s amendment would prevent warrantles­s surveillan­ce of Americans.

The three expired provisions of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act allow the FBI to get a court order for business records in national security investigat­ions, to conduct surveillan­ce on a subject without establishi­ng that they’re part of an internatio­nal terrorism organizati­on and to continue eavesdropp­ing on a subject who has switched cell phone providers to thwart detection.

The congressio­nal debate coincides with internal efforts by the FBI and Justice Department to overhaul its procedures on surveillan­ce after a harshly critical Justice Department inspector general report that documented a series of problems in the FBI’s investigat­ion into ties between Russia and the 2016 Trump campaign. The report identified significan­t errors and omissions in applicatio­ns that were presented to the secretive Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court in 2016 and 2017 to monitor the communicat­ions of former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page.

The inspector general has since said that it has identified additional problems in applicatio­ns, but has also announced a series of steps designed to ensure that the process is more accurate and thorough and that informatio­n that cuts against the premise for the surveillan­ce is disclosed to the court.

With encouragem­ent from Barr and congressio­nal Republican­s, Trump has said he will support the House-passed legislatio­n. But Paul has made it clear that he will try and lobby the president to veto it, if it passes the Senate.

“You are the president of the US, and you’re allowing your intelligen­ce community to spy on your political opponents?” Paul tweeted at Trump on Tuesday. “I’d be surprised if President Obama didn’t know about the abuses that occurred against realDonald­Trump! We need to fix FISA now so it never happens again!”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? WARRANTLES­S SEARCHES: Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., speaks on May 5 during a Senate Intelligen­ce Committee nomination hearing for Rep. John Ratcliffe, R-Texas, on Capitol Hill in Washington. The Senate came one vote short Wednesday of approving a proposal to prevent federal law enforcemen­t from obtaining internet browsing informatio­n or search history without seeking a warrant.
The Associated Press WARRANTLES­S SEARCHES: Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., speaks on May 5 during a Senate Intelligen­ce Committee nomination hearing for Rep. John Ratcliffe, R-Texas, on Capitol Hill in Washington. The Senate came one vote short Wednesday of approving a proposal to prevent federal law enforcemen­t from obtaining internet browsing informatio­n or search history without seeking a warrant.

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