McConnell
defends support of Patriot Act, NSA program
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[May 11, 2015]
By Elizabeth Barber
BOSTON (Reuters) - Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell on Sunday defended his support for a measure in the USA
Patriot Act that has anchored a National Security Agency program to
collect Americans’ phone data.
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Speaking at the Edward M. Kennedy Institute in Boston, McConnell
called the measure “an important tool to prevent the next terrorist
attack,” and pledged to continue fighting for it against recent
challenges.
The Patriot Act’s counter-terrorism measure, Section 215, is set to
expire on June 1, and McConnell is seeking to extend it through
2020.
The act is at the center of a bitter controversy, with a federal
appeals court ruling this month that Section 215 does not allow the
NSA to collect Americans’ phone data in bulk.
The USA Freedom Act, a fresh bill that would scale back the NSA’s
access to telephone records, is expected to pass the House and head
to the Senate, where it is opposed by McConnell.
"The nation is better off with an extension of the Patriot Act than
not, but we’ll see where the votes go,” McConnell said.
In his talk and in response to questions from the stage by a New
York Times reporter, the Kentucky congressman emphasized that his
goal as majority leader is to prioritize bipartisanship and get
bills passed.
“Look for the things you agree on and do them,” he said. “That’s the
kind of Senate we need to have again.”
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One such bill that should be passed, McConnell said, is legislation
fast-tracking U.S. President Barack Obama’s authority to pursue
trade agreements.
McConnell said he expects to get the needed 60 votes in the
100-member Senate to pass the bill on Tuesday, contending that it is
to Republicans’ advantage to give the president such powers and
gamble that 2016 will put one of their own in the White House.
He also praised the president for “going against type” to support
the bill.
(Reporting by Elizabeth Barber in Boston; Editing by Dan Whitcomb
and Nick Zieminski)
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