Bill ending NSA phone data collection heads to Obama
The USA Freedom Act, a bill that would end the National Security Agency’s practice of collecting troves of call data from telephone companies, passed on a 67 to 32 vote. It would instead mandate a six-month transition to a system in which the data would remain in private hands but could be searched on a case-by-case basis under a court order.
President Obama has said he will sign the bill, which was passed by a wide margin in the House last month but became caught up in a sharp intraparty divide between Senate Republican leaders who sought to preserve the status quo and a small cadre of GOP senators who joined with Democrats in supporting changes to surveillance programs.
Notably, in the run-up to the expiration of Patriot Act legal authority early Monday, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) objected to efforts to quickly pass either the House bill or short-term extensions of current law, frustrating both the White House and his fellow Senate Republicans.
Those “improvements,” however, threatened to further delay passage of the legislation. Any change would have sent the bill back to the House, where its fate was uncertain.
Leaders of the House Judiciary Committee — which crafted the USA Freedom Act on a bipartisan basis with intelligence officials, civil libertarians and telecommunications companies — said in a statement before Tuesday’s votes that the House was “not likely to accept the changes proposed,” which would “only serve to weaken the House-passed bill and postpone timely enactment of legislation that responsibly protects national security while enhancing civil liberty protections.”
McConnell downplayed the House threats Tuesday, saying the Senate reserved the right to act as it saw fit, regardless of the pending lapse in surveillance authority.
“You’d think it was the Ten Commandments,” he said of House leaders’ insistence that the bill pass without changes.
Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), a close McConnell ally, said he was concerned about the lapse but more concerned about a possible weakening of national security capabilities under the House-passed bill. “Look, if we’re talking about a day or two, I think we ought to do what we can to try to make it better,” he said.
McConnell, said Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), “bungled this issue from start to finish,” adding that his pursuit of amendments likely to be rejected in the House was “risking our security by extending this drama so he can save face.”
Just before the final vote around 4 p.m. Tuesday, McConnell took to the floor to defend his moves to preserve the existing surveillance programs and otherwise lambaste Obama for his foreign policy — calling the end of the phone-data program the latest in a series of missteps that includes his decisions to withdraw troops from Iraq and Afghanistan and to seek the closure of the Guantanamo Bay prison camp.
“The pattern is clear,” McConnell said. “The president has been a reluctant commander-in-chief.”
McConnell’s amendments would have tweaked the USA Freedom Act to give further assurances that intelligence officials will be able to effectively search private phone records.
One amendment would have extended the transition period away from bulk collection to one year in order, in McConnell’s words, to “ensure that there is adequate time . . . to build and test a system that doesn’t yet exist.” Another would have required the new system to be certified as viable by the director of national intelligence, and a third would require telecom companies to notify the government if they change their data-retention policies.
None of the amendments went as far as McConnell and most Republicans wanted to preserve the status quo, but Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.), chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, suggested they would have improved national security while not watering down the bill so much that it would be rejected by the House.
Paul sought amendments of his own that would take the bill in the opposite direction, further restricting surveillance powers in a bid to preserve civil liberties. But McConnell employed a procedural maneuver to prevent amendments other than his own.
The bill as passed will also reauthorize other, less controversial counterterrorism tools, such as “roving wiretaps” of criminal suspects who frequently switch phones to evade authorities.
Two other Patriot Act provisions that lapsed Monday are Section 215, which not only justified NSA’s bulk collection but also is used in less controversial fashion to obtain records on individual terrorist suspects, and an authority that permits surveillance on a “lone wolf” suspect who cannot be linked to a specific terrorist group. The latter power has never been used.
During the lapse, the intelligence community has not gone completely without tools. It has other investigative powers, such as national security letters and traditional wiretaps, that it can use. And, to be sure, there are investigations launched before Sunday in which the expired tools were used, and the surveillance authorized by those tools may continue under a grandfather clause in the Patriot Act.
A national security official confirmed that “the existing orders are still good” under that clause. But, he said, “it’s not a good long-term solution. Or even a mid-term solution.”
If the FBI turns up a new terrorist suspect this week, it cannot use any of the expired tools to investigate that person, said the official, who was not authorized to speak on the record.
Paul Kane contributed to this report.
Mike
DeBonis covers Congress and national politics for The Washington Post.
He previously covered D.C. politics and government from 2007 to 2015.
Ellen
Nakashima is a national security reporter for The Washington Post. She
focuses on issues relating to intelligence, technology and civil
liberties.
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