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 NEWS & UPDATES

The Latest Proposal to Compromise Americans’ Privacy – Delay the Reauthorization Debate of Section 702

10/16/2025

 
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Senator Tom Cotton (R-AR)
​Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act is an authority enacted by Congress to allow U.S. intelligence agencies to surveil foreign spies and terrorists. But it has been used in the past by the federal government to extract the communications of millions of Americans.
  • Among those who had their privacy violated by Section 702 data were 19,000 donors to a congressional campaign. This authority was also used to spy on a state senator, a state judge, a congressman, and a U.S. senator. If judges and Members of Congress can have their rights violated, imagine how much respect the FBI and other government agencies have for your privacy.

Concerned by this abuse of Section 702 authority, Congress put this surveillance power on a short leash – with the next reauthorization in April 2026.
 
Now Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) is reportedly promoting the idea of delaying the next reauthorization of this key surveillance authority for another 18 months. No matter how well-intentioned, this is a bad idea that would derail any meaningful debate on surveillance reform in this and the next Congress.  
 
Such a delay would also remove any leverage Congress has to perform meaningful oversight of an intelligence community that resists accountability at almost every turn.
 
The April 2024 Debate Produced Significant Reforms
 
The last reauthorization demonstrates that the leverage of a hard deadline at a relatively calm time in the legislative calendar yields results.
  • In the face of furious lobbying by the intelligence community, surveillance reformers on the Hill managed to leverage the April 2024 hard deadline to require the FBI to provide quarterly reports on the number of Americans targeted under Section 702.
 
  • Champions of reform proposed a warrant requirement for the extraction of an American’s communications – an amendment that came within one vote of passing the House. Congress also took the Section 702 debate as an opportunity to end “abouts” data collection, a loose practice that prompted the FISA Court to publicly excoriate the National Security Agency for an “institutional lack of candor” about a “very serious Fourth Amendment issue.”

Finally, Congress shortened the window for the next reauthorization of Section 702 – and its attendant surveillance debate – from five years to just two. This ensured that any new issues that emerged would be tracked by congressional overseers.
 
The Issues Ahead
 
With the next Section 702 reauthorization vote set for April 2026, Congress is beginning once again to treat it as an opportunity to discuss broader surveillance policy.
Emerging questions include:
​
  • Why, and under what exact authority, did the FBI surveil the communications of eight senators and one House Member in 2021?
 
  • A recent Department of Justice report portrays FBI agents as suffering from anxiety and “audit fatigue” in meeting the requirements of Section 702 reforms. If this is the case, couldn’t their anxiety be relieved by sharing responsibility with judges in the form of warrants?
 
  • The FBI, IRS, and other federal agency purchase the digital breadcrumbs we leave online when we communicate or conduct an online search. When, if ever, will Congress get another opportunity to require a warrant for the acquisition of Americans’ personal data?
 
  • If the Section 702 debate is scrapped next April, when else will Congress get a chance to review the operations of the “make everyone a spy” provision, a last-minute addition in the 2024 debate that obliges almost all businesses to help the government spy on their customers?

If your answer to the above questions is that these issues can simply be taken up after the 18-month extension, think again.
 
The Crowded Calendar of October 2027
 
The beauty of an April reauthorization is that it falls at a fairly calm time in the legislative calendar. An 18-month delay would bump the Section 702 reauthorization vote and the next surveillance debate into the next Congress, to October 2027, amid the press of business around the end of the budgetary cycle. Such debates would have to compete with a likely continuing resolution and a host of contentious spending measures.
 
There would be no time to debate anything about surveillance. It would just be another “clean” reauthorization – which would suit the advocates of the status quo just fine.
Members should remain firm: Congress agreed to an April 2026 reauthorization debate for Section 702.
 
Let’s keep it that way.

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