Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition
Trump’s spy tweet rattles GOP
still faces uncertainty in the Senate, where Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., has threatened a filibuster.
Trump’s initial tweet insisted, angrily and contrary to all known evidence, that the NSA’s surveillance program might have been used to spy on his campaign during the 2016 election.
“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 wrote.
The tweet came shortly after “Fox & Friends,” Trump’s favorite program and a frequent inspiration for his Twitter account, aired a segment in which Andrew Napolitano, a commentator, offered scathing criticism of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
“Mr. President, this is not the way to go,” he said.
After talking to Ryan, Trump issued a second tweet, more supportive of the surveillance authority:
“With that being said, I have personally directed the fix to the unmasking process since taking office and today’s vote is about foreign surveillance of foreign bad guys on foreign land. We need it! Get smart!”
The White House, in an official statement released Wednesday night, had warned lawmakers of the need for the bill, arguing that an alternative pushed by critics on both the right and left would undermine “the useful role FISA’s Section 702 authority plays in protecting American lives.”
The House defeated that amendment, 233-183, Thursday.
The tweets had GOP lawmakers at a private meeting listening to real-time updates on the president’s stream of consciousness.
Rep. Devin Nunes, RCalif., chairman of the House intelligence committee and chief sponsor of the bill to extend surveillance authority, read Trump’s second tweet aloud to the group.
Nunes showed his phone to House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., according to lawmakers and others familiar with the private meeting.
“It was funny,” said Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla. “‘Be smart’ got lots of laughs.”
“He is a rookie,” Cole said. “But that’s one of the reasons the American people chose him.”
The tweeting incident was the second time this week that Trump publicly differed from his administration’s position on a major issue.
On Tuesday, Trump said he would agree to sign a stand-alone bill extending legal protections to socalled “Dreamers,” the roughly 700,000 immigrants who came to this country illegally as children.
Trump had to walk that statement back after McCarthy reminded him that the White House was insisting such protections could be agreed to only in exchange for a host of other changes to immigration law.
In the House on Thursday, the floor debate quickly turned contentious as critics of the surveillance legislation seized on the president’s comments. The debate split lawmakers into unusual bipartisan alliances, which frequently have stymied legislative action on surveillance since former NSA contractor Edward Snowden disclosed the scope of the eavesdropping program in 2013.
A coalition of liberal Democrats and conservative Republicans was pushing an alternative bill that would have limited the NSA’s power and established additional privacy protections for Americans, requiring intelligence agencies to go to court for a warrant before getting most information on U.S. citizens.
“Get a warrant,” said Rep. Ted Poe, R-Texas. “Let’s redraft it and protect Americans.”
Democrats seized on Trump’s remarks as reason to put off the debate.
Rep. Adam Schiff, the top Democrat on the intelligence committee, went to the House floor to urge Republicans to postpone the vote after the “inaccurate, conflicting and confusing statements.”
“All of us were in turmoil this morning in the wake of the president’s tweets, which threw the whole proceedings into disarray,” he said later. “When the first tweet came out, all of us were imagining the expletives that were flying in the intelligence community, let alone the Cabinet.”