U.S. lawmakers seek temporary extension
to internet spying program
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[December 21, 2017]
By Dustin Volz
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican leaders
in the U.S. House of Representatives are working to build support to
temporarily extend the National Security Agency's expiring internet
surveillance program by tucking it into a stop-gap funding measure,
lawmakers said.
The month-long extension of the surveillance law, known as Section 702
of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, would punt a contentious
national security issue into the new year in an attempt to buy lawmakers
more time to hash out differences over various proposed privacy reforms.
Lawmakers leaving a Republican conference meeting on Wednesday evening
said it was not clear whether the stop-gap bill had enough support to
avert a partial government shutdown on Saturday, or whether the possible
addition of the Section 702 extension would impact its chances for
passage. It remained possible lawmakers would vote on the short-term
extension separate from the spending bill.
Absent congressional action the law, which allows the NSA to collect
vast amounts of digital communications from foreign suspects living
outside the United States, will expire on Dec. 31.
Earlier in the day, House Republicans retreated from a plan to vote on a
stand-alone measure to renew Section 702 until 2021 amid sizable
opposition from both parties that stemmed from concerns the bill would
violate U.S. privacy rights.
Some U.S. officials have recently said that deadline may not ultimately
matter and that the program can lawfully continue through April due to
the way it is annually certified.
But lawmakers and the White House still view the law's end-year
expiration as significant.
"I think clearly we need the reauthorization for FISA, and that is
expected we'll get that done" before the end of the year, Marc Short,
the White House's legislative director, said Wednesday on MSNBC.
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Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), House Majority Leader, arrives for a
Republican conference meeting at the U.S. Capitol in Washington,
U.S., December 20, 2017. REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein
U.S. intelligence officials consider Section 702 among the most
vital of tools at their disposal to thwart threats to national
security and American allies.
The law allows the NSA to collect vast amounts of digital
communications from foreign suspects living outside the United
States.
But the program incidentally gathers communications of Americans for
a variety of technical reasons, including if they communicate with a
foreign target living overseas.
Those communications can then be subject to searches without a
warrant, including by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The House Judiciary Committee advanced a bill in November that would
partially restrict the U.S. government’s ability to review American
data by requiring a warrant in some cases.
(Reporting by Dustin Volz and Richard Cowan, additional reporting by
Timothy Ahmann; Editing by Chris Reese and Lisa Shumaker)
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