Washington seemed to have reached a tipping point last week in the surveillance reform debate. Reformers are taking heart from the receptivity of the Trump Administration and its nominees to surveillance reform, while defenders of the surveillance status quo are doubling down on the untenable position of opposing all reform. Those defenders likely agree with The Wall Street Journal, whose editorial board found the removal of Rep. Mike Turner, Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, a “bad message about the need for public honesty about threats to U.S. security.” In confirmation hearings of Trump nominees several senators created a false dichotomy when describing the fate of Section 702 – the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act authority that allows federal agencies to spy on foreign threats on foreign soil, but abused to spy on many Americans in domestic cases. The choice these champions of the intelligence community offered was between two extremes. One would be to let Section 702’s authority lapse when it comes up for renewal in 2026. The other would be to leave it in place, unchanged. In other words, they are saying our only choice is to either expose the American homeland to terrorists or loyally affirm the surveillance status quo. But something else happened last week as well. Nuance and more openness to debate seemed to be breaking through the noise, and not a minute too soon. While the new House Intelligence Chairman Rick Crawford (R-AR) is not known as a surveillance reformer, civil liberties groups are hopeful he will allow a balanced debate to take place. We look forward to Chairman Crawford listening to our objections about the government’s abuses of Section 702 and the separate expansion of “electronic communications service providers” with a legal duty to engage in domestic spying. Chairman Crawford surely knows that many on the Hill are still smarting from the way some colleagues strong-armed them into blocking a promised fix to a law mandating that virtually every business, organization and house of worship with free Wi-Fi be obligated to spy on their customers for the NSA. Chairman Crawford will also be told that reformers are pushing back on Section 702, not because we want to protect foreigners – who have no Fourth Amendment rights – but because we want to protect American citizens from warrantless FBI surveillance in ordinary domestic investigations. Consider that as recently as 2022, the FBI had accessed the communications of Americans garnered via Section 702 more than 200,000 times. President Trump, having been victimized himself through another FISA authority during the Carter Page affair, seems to be nominating Cabinet officers who agree that the FBI has been out-of-control. Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) made this clear when he was interviewed by Laura Ingraham on Fox News to discuss the confirmation testimony of Pam Bondi, President Trump’s AG nominee. Sen. Lee said of Bondi: “She understands the Fourth Amendment. She understands that the U.S. government can’t go after your personal effects, your papers, your private communications, without a warrant … backdoor warrantless searches under FISA 702 have become a problem. “We’re told over and over again by FBI Directors and attorneys general, ‘Don’t worry about it. These aren’t the [violations] you’re looking for. We have procedures to handle this.’ And they’re lying. Pam Bondi went on record today, saying ‘We shouldn’t do that.’ And I am thrilled that she did.” The dust is still settling from an earthquake election, the replacement of a House Intelligence Committee chairman, and a likely attorney general affirming that the backdoor search loophole of Section 702 must be addressed. Perhaps now we can have a mature discussion about surveillance reform. If we do, Congress can add guardrails to Section 702 to end the FBI’s warrantless surveillance of Americans while keeping a strong national security tool that protects the American homeland. Perhaps the stars are lining up for a deal. Comments are closed.
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