The Columbus Dispatch

Senate to vote on bill that would expand surveillan­ce

- Raphael Satter and Zeba Siddiqui

WASHINGTON – Reformers had hoped that the debate over the reauthoriz­ation of a key domestic surveillan­ce law would lead to new safeguards protecting Americans’ data.

But the bill now headed to the Senate instead expands the scope of the country’s domestic surveillan­ce program, allowing police organizati­ons including the FBI access to a far broader swathe of sensitive data on their fellow citizens than before.

Missing from the proposed legislatio­n is any need for a warrant. A vote to require officials to seek judicial authorizat­ion before exploiting the data failed on a vote of 212 to 212 in the House of Representa­tives on Friday.

“It’s obviously pretty disappoint­ing to have lost on a tie vote,” said Kia Hamadanchy, a senior policy counsel with the American Civil Liberties Union. The ACLU is one of scores of nongovernm­ental organizati­ons that have been lobbying to reform Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act, or FISA, which allows law enforcemen­t to mine the massive trove of data collected by American spies.

Hamadanchy said the bipartisan support for a warrant requiremen­t was defeated in part by what he called “incredible” pressure on Congressio­nal Democrats from the Joe Biden administra­tion.

“It’s hard to say no to the White House of your own party,” he said.

A White House official said that the administra­tion had “many, many conversati­ons” with lawmakers about the legal authoritie­s of 702 “and the harmful impacts that some of these warrants would have to collect valuable and timely intel to protect the homeland.” And in a statement Wednesday, National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan publicly urged the Senate to pass the bill immediatel­y.

As written, the bill would allow U.S. spies to draw data not just from any U.S. “electronic communicat­ions service provider,” as they have in the past, but “any service provider” with “access to equipment that is being or may be used to transmit or store wire or electronic communicat­ions.”

The distribute­d nature of the internet means that could be virtually anyone, as the Informatio­n Technology Industry Council, a lobbying group, argued in a blog post.

“The language in the amendment vastly expands the U.S. government’s warrantles­s surveillan­ce capabiliti­es, damaging the competitiv­eness of U.S. technology companies large and small,” the group said, urging senators to reverse the change.

Senate leaders from both parties are working to rush the bill through, with a vote expected this week.

Some lawmakers, including Democratic Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon, are still fighting. Speaking on the Senate floor Tuesday, Wyden offered a short term extension of the 702 authority to give lawmakers more time to figure out a way forward.

“Senators do not need to rubber stamp a disastrous surveillan­ce bill,” he told his colleagues.

Hamadanchy said his organizati­on was urging Democratic lawmakers under pressure from the White House to think about how the expanded surveillan­ce powers might be used if Donald Trump were re-elected in November.

 ?? WURM/REUTERS FILE KEVIN ?? Senate leaders from both parties are working to rush the bill through, with a vote expected this week.
WURM/REUTERS FILE KEVIN Senate leaders from both parties are working to rush the bill through, with a vote expected this week.

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