Sen.
Rand Paul (R-KY) responds to reporters' questions as he leaves the
Senate floor after making remarks on a rare working Sunday, on Capitol
Hill, in Washington May 31, 2015. Lawmakers were called back from recess
to debate the expiration of the Patriot Act, which has divided Congress
because of its domestic surveillance programs.
Mike Theiler/Reuters
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WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - The legal authority for U.S. spy agencies' collection of
Americans' phone records and other data expired at midnight on Sunday
after the Senate failed to pass legislation extending their powers.
After debate pitting Americans' distrust of
intrusive government against fears of terrorist attacks, the Senate
voted to advance reform legislation that would replace the bulk phone
records program revealed two years ago by former National Security
Agency contractor Edward Snowden.
Although the Senate did not act in time to keep
the program from expiring, the vote was at least a partial victory for
Democratic President Barack Obama, who had pushed for the reform measure
as a compromise addressing privacy concerns while preserving a tool to
help protect the country from attack.
But final Senate passage was delayed until at
least Tuesday by objections from Senator Rand Paul, a libertarian
Republican presidential hopeful who has fulminated against the NSA
program as illegal and unconstitutional.
As a result, the government's collection and
search of phone records terminated at midnight when key provisions of a
post-Sept. 11, 2001, law known as the USA Patriot Act expired.
In addition, U.S. law enforcement and security agencies will lose authority to conduct other programs.
Those allow for "roving wiretaps" aimed at
terrorism suspects who use multiple disposable cell phones; permit
authorities to target "lone wolf" suspects with no connection to
specific terrorist groups, and make it easier to seize personal and
business records of suspects and their associates.
Still, eventual resumption of the phone records
program in another form, and the other government powers, appeared
likely after the Senate voted 77-17 to take up the reform legislation,
called the USA Freedom Act.
"This bill will ultimately pass," Paul acknowledged after the procedural vote.
The Senate abruptly reversed course during a rare
Sunday session to let the bill go ahead, after Republican Majority
Leader Mitch McConnell reluctantly acknowledged that Paul had stymied
his efforts to extend the Patriot Act provisions.
Intelligence experts say a lapse of only a few
days would have little immediate effect. The government is allowed to
continue collecting information related to any foreign intelligence
investigation that began before the deadline.
Obama strongly backed the Freedom Act, as have most Democrats. It passed the House of Representatives on May 13 by 338-88.
After the Senate adjourned, the White House issued
a statement calling on the Senate to "put aside partisan motivations
and act swiftly."
The measure could face more debate in Congress.
Republican Senator Richard Burr offered several amendments, including
one to extend the existing program for 12 months to provide more time to
adopt changes mandated by the Freedom Act.
That could be a problem for some House members, because it doubles the transition period in their version of the bill.
'DEMAGOGUERY AND DISINFORMATION'
Republicans have been deeply divided on the issue.
Security hawks wanted the NSA program to continue as is, and
libertarians like Paul want to kill it altogether.
The Senate debate was angry.
Paul said the Patriot Act provisions wasted
resources better spent targeting those planning attacks. He even accused
some of his critics of wanting an attack on the United States "so they
can blame it on me."
McConnell accused Paul, his fellow Kentucky
Republican, and other Patriot Act opponents of waging "a campaign of
demagoguery and disinformation" based on revelations from Snowden "who
was last seen in Russia."
McConnell has endorsed Paul for president. But he
wanted to extend the Patriot Act provisions, unchanged, for five years,
and agreed only reluctantly to allow a vote on the Freedom Act despite
what he called its "serious flaws."
Several senators accused Paul of using the issue to raise money for his presidential campaign.
"He obviously has a higher priority for his
fundraising and political ambitions than for the security of the
nation," Senator John McCain, the 2008 Republican presidential nominee,
told reporters.
The Senate resumed consideration of the
legislation at 4 p.m. EDT, just as security officials said they had to
begin shutting down the NSA program to meet the deadline.
The Freedom Act would end spy agencies' bulk
collection of domestic telephone "metadata" and replace it with a more
targeted system.
The records would be held by telecommunications
companies, not the government, and the NSA would have to get court
approval to gain access to specific data. Neither the current nor
proposed new system gives the government access to the content of phone
conversations.
Many civil liberties groups feel the Freedom Act does not go far enough in protecting privacy.
"Congress should take advantage of this sunset to
pass far reaching surveillance reform, instead of the weak bill
currently under consideration," Michael Macleod-Ball, acting director of
the American Civil Liberties Union's Washington Legislative Office,
said in a statement.
A review panel Obama established in 2013 concluded
that the metadata collection program had not been essential to
preventing any terrorist attack. Security officials counter that it
provides important data they can combine with other intelligence to help
stop attacks.
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