Marysville Appeal-Democrat

House trips up again in spy authority reauthoriz­ation push

- By Ryan Tarinelli Cq-roll Call

WASHINGTON —

The House once again stumbled to get a floor vote on legislatio­n that would reauthoriz­e a powerful surveillan­ce authority, as a group of Republican­s aired concerns that it didn’t do enough to protect the privacy of Americans.

Republican leadership pushed this week to pass a bill to reauthoriz­e Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act, which is set to expire

April 19.

But the House, on a 193-228 vote, rejected a rule that would have set up the terms of floor considerat­ion of the bill, adding more uncertaint­y into the reauthoriz­ation process for a program the intelligen­ce community has called essential for national security.

Nineteen Republican­s voted against the rule. Several aired concerns on the floor ahead of the vote that the current version of the bill does not include a provision to require the government to get a warrant before searching for the informatio­n of Americans.

The rule would have allowed for a vote on an amendment that would add a warrant requiremen­t to Section 702, an issue that has fractured both House conference­s and spurred a fierce standoff between the House Judiciary Committee and the House Intelligen­ce Committee.

But several Republican­s expressed a reluctance for the House to move on a bill that could expand some authority without knowing for sure if the warrant requiremen­t would be adopted to constrict that authority.

“A clean extension is arguably preferable to an expansion with a precooked determinat­ion that we’re not going to pass a warrant protection,” Rep. Chip Roy, R–texas, told reporters after the vote.

Democrats voted against the rule as well. The rule also would have provided for considerat­ion of a partisan measure that would criticize the Biden administra­tion’s approach to security on the U.s.-mexico border.

The Section 702 authority allows the U.S. government to collect digital communicat­ions of foreigners located outside the country. But the program has also been the subject of controvers­y because it sweeps up the communicat­ions of Americans and allows the FBI to search through data without a warrant.

Former President Donald Trump, the presumptiv­e 2024 Republican presidenti­al nominee, jumped into the debate early Wednesday morning. “KILL FISA, IT WAS ILLEGALLY USED AGAINST ME, AND MANY OTHERS,” Trump wrote on social media. “THEY SPIED ON MY CAMPAIGN!!!”

A Justice Department watchdog found “significan­t inaccuraci­es and omissions” in court applicatio­ns to allow for continued surveillan­ce of former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page, although that was under a different section of the FISA law than Section 702.

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