House Members Should Not Be Stampeded – Congress Has All Year to Debate and Fix Section 7023/31/2026
As the April 20 expiration of FISA Section 702 approaches, a familiar script is playing out on Capitol Hill. Members are warned that any delay in reauthorizing Section 702 – which enables U.S. intelligence agencies to surveil foreign threats – risks allowing a terrorist attack to unfold on American soil. This “you will have blood on your hands” argument is not just wrong. It is a cynical ploy to short-circuit a debate that Congress owes the American people, one that would in no way endanger national security. Here is the reality: Letting the statutory authority of Section 702 lapse does NOT mean America’s surveillance goes dark. Surveillance continues under Section 702 certifications issued by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which remain valid until their expiration – currently extending to March 2027. This is not speculation. It is how this law works. As The New York Times has reported, legal directives to communications providers “shall continue in effect” under existing court authorizations. Yet lawmakers are again being told by the intelligence community to act immediately or risk catastrophe. This fear-based messaging has become routine, repeatedly stampeding Congress into reauthorizing Section 702 without strong reforms to protect Americans’ privacy. Enacted by Congress to target foreign threats abroad, Section 702 has been used to conduct millions of warrantless searches of Americans’ communications – peaking at 3.4 million in 2021. These are the predictable results of allowing the government to conduct “backdoor searches” without a warrant. In 2024, a bipartisan amendment to require warrants for searches of Americans’ communications failed in a 212–212 tie in the House. That vote showed how close meaningful reform is – if lawmakers are given the time to pursue it. Supporters of a “clean” extension – one without any reform amendments – are once again promising a debate on reforms later. Such promised reform debates never arrive. Recent history gives no reason to believe that this time will be different. Congress has time to debate well beyond April 20. It has time to patiently consider reforms, such as adding a warrant requirement before 702-derived communications of Americans can be inspected. The choice for Congress is not between national security and civil liberties. It is between rubber-stamping a flawed surveillance authority and doing the hard work of fixing it for their constituents. Comments are closed.
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