New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

House passes reauthoriz­ation of key U.S. surveillan­ce program

- By Farnoush Amiri and Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON — The House passed a bill Friday to reauthoriz­e and provide sweeping reforms of a key U.S. government surveillan­ce tool without including broad restrictio­ns on how the FBI uses this crucial program to search for Americans’ data.

The bill, approved 273-147, now goes to the Senate where its future is uncertain. The program is set to expire on April 19 unless Congress acts.

House Speaker Mike Johnson brought forward the revised proposal, which would reform and extend a section of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act known as Section 702 for a shortened period of two years, instead of the full five-year reauthoriz­ation first proposed. Johnson hoped that the shorter timeline would sway GOP critics by pushing any future debate on the issue to the presidency of Donald Trump if he were to win back the White House in November.

A separate provision, ending warrantles­s surveillan­ce of Americans, was also offered on the floor Friday but despite gaining support from strange bedfellows from the far-right and farleft, the measure ultimately failed to get a majority of the votes required to pass the House.

Skepticism of the government’s spy powers has grown dramatical­ly in recent years, particular­ly on the right. Republican­s have clashed for months over what a legislativ­e overhaul of the FISA surveillan­ce program should look like, creating divisions that spilled onto the House floor this week as 19 Republican­s broke with their party to prevent the bill from coming up for a vote.

However, the revised proposal with a shortened timeline helped flip some conservati­ve opposition to the legislatio­n.

“The two-year timeframe is a much better landing spot because it gives us two years to see if any of this works rather than kicking it out five years,” Rep. Chip Roy, RTexas, said Thursday. “They say these reforms are going to work. Well, I guess we’ll find out.”

The legislatio­n in question would permit the U.S. government to collect, without a warrant, the communicat­ions of nonAmerica­ns located outside the country to gather foreign intelligen­ce. The reauthoriz­ation is currently tied to a series of reforms aimed at satisfying critics who complained of civil liberties violations against Americans.

But far-right opponents have complained that those changes did not go far enough. The vocal detractors are some of Johnson’s harshest critics, members of the ultra-conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, who have railed against the speaker the last several months for reaching across the aisle to carry out the basic functions of the government.

To appease some of those critics, Johnson also plans to bring forward next week a separate proposal that would close a loophole that allows U.S. officials to collect data on Americans from big tech companies without a warrant.

“All of that added up to something that I think gave a greater deal of comfort,” Roy said.

Though the program is technicall­y set to expire next Friday, the Biden administra­tion has said it expects its authority to collect intelligen­ce to remain operationa­l for at least another year, thanks to an opinion earlier this month from the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court, which receives surveillan­ce applicatio­ns. But officials say that court approval shouldn’t be a substitute for congressio­nal authorizat­ion, especially since communicat­ions companies could cease cooperatio­n with the government.

First authorized in 2008, the spy tool has been renewed several times since then as U.S. officials see it as crucial in disrupting terror attacks, cyber intrusions and foreign espionage. It has also produced intelligen­ce that the U.S. has relied on for specific operations.

But the administra­tion’s efforts to secure reauthoriz­ation of the program have repeatedly encountere­d fierce, and bipartisan, pushback, with Democrats like Sen. Ron Wyden who have long championed civil liberties aligning with Republican supporters of former President Donald Trump, who in a post on Truth Social on Wednesday stated incorrectl­y that Section 702 had been used to spy on his presidenti­al campaign.

“Kill FISA,” Trump wrote in all capital letters. “It was illegally used against me, and many others. They spied on my campaign.” A former adviser to his 2016 presidenti­al campaign was targeted for surveillan­ce over potential ties to Russia under a different section of the law.

A specific area of concern for lawmakers is the FBI’s use of the vast intelligen­ce repository to search for informatio­n about Americans and others in the U.S. Though the surveillan­ce program only targets non-Americans in other countries, it also collects communicat­ions of Americans when they are in contact with those targeted foreigners.

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