Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Democrats pull surveillan­ce bill after agreement crumbles

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Democrats on Thursday pulled legislatio­n from the House floor to extend FBI surveillan­ce authoritie­s after President Donald Trump and Republican­s turned against the measure and ensured its defeat.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said there instead would be a new round of negotiatio­ns with the Senate over the expired powers the FBI considers vital in fighting terrorism. The House later voted 284122 to officially start those negotiatio­ns.

The impasse raised the potential for the surveillan­ce powers to remain expired indefinite­ly. The provisions, which lapsed in March, allow the FBI to get a court order for business records in national security investigat­ions and conduct surveillan­ce on subjects without establishi­ng they’re acting on behalf of an internatio­nal terrorism organizati­on. They also make it easier for investigat­ors to continue eavesdropp­ing on a subject who has switched cellphone providers to thwart detection.

A bill renewing those authoritie­s passed the Senate with 80 votes earlier this month, and it appeared on track for easy passage. The House had overwhelmi­ngly supported a similar measure in March with the support of 126 Republican­s. That bill was a compromise worked out between the two parties and Attorney General William Barr.

But the compromise crumbled this week as Mr. Trump threatened a veto and House Republican­s who had once voted for the bill quickly followed his lead.

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