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With Old GOP Consensus Changed, Senate Set To Resume Debate On FISA

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and Attorney General William Barr have supported passage of now-lapsed surveillance authorities. Debate is expected soon in the Senate.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and Attorney General William Barr have supported passage of now-lapsed surveillance authorities. Debate is expected soon in the Senate.

The Senate is expected to take up three domestic surveillance tools used in national security investigations this week, reviving debate over the provisions two months after letting them expire.

The tussle over renewing the authorities is part of a larger political fight over the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, that dates back years but became a headliner during the Russia investigation—even though the tools that expired are not linked to that probe.

The surveillance powers that lapsed are known as the business records, lone wolf and roving-wiretap provisions.

Lawmakers wrote expiration dates into earlier laws authorizing these kinds of surveillance, requiring action in order for them to be sustained.

The intelligence community argues that the tools are important in helping federal authorities stop potential terrorists and combat foreign spies. Privacy advocates say lawmakers should impose greater protections for civil liberties in any re-authorization.

The provisions expired on March 15 because of congressional inaction, in part because lawmakers were focused at the time on passing coronavirus relief legislation.

Attorney General William Barr and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., lobbied majority Republicans in the Senate on behalf of passage, but too few senators were sold and they let the surveillance provisions go dormant.

The House, however, did manage to cobble together and pass a bipartisan FISA measure in March to renew the surveillance authorities. That compromise legislation included a number of changes, including new privacy protections and the removal of a controversial phone metadata program.

It also would impose penalties on officials who lie to the secretive court that oversees national security surveillance, known as the FISA court.

That change and a few others were meant to address some of the problems identified by the Justice Department inspector general in the FBI's surveillance of former Trump campaign aide Carter Page during the Russia investigation.

The reauthorization stalled in the Senate, however, in the face of opposition from several senators, including Utah Republican Mike Lee and Vermont Democrat Patrick Leahy, who feel the House reforms didn't go far enough.

Now, as part of an agreement McConnell struck in March, the Senate is poised to resume debate on the FISA provisions, including several amendments proposed by lawmakers demanding more sweeping changes to the law.

It remains unclear where President Trump, who would have to sign into law anything Congress passes, stands on FISA reauthorization. He expressed displeasure with aspects of the legislation before the matter was set aside in March.
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