Congress Allows Surveillance Authority to Expire
Congress allowed a significant surveillance authority to expire after the House rejected a bill extending Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
Section 702 authorizes the government to surveil foreign nationals outside the United States without obtaining individual warrants. Intelligence agencies have relied on the provision for two decades to collect communications from foreign targets deemed threats to national security.
Lawmakers declined to advance the extension before leaving town for recess, according to reporting from multiple outlets. The House's inaction means the authority lapses without renewal, a rare development in surveillance policy debates where extensions have historically moved through Congress with bipartisan support.
The provision has enabled the National Security Agency and other intelligence agencies to access vast quantities of electronic communications. Supporters argue it remains essential to counterterrorism and counterintelligence operations. Critics have long objected to the practice, saying it can inadvertently sweep up communications from Americans and lacks sufficient judicial oversight.
No reporting indicated whether the House majority sought the lapse or whether competing factions prevented consensus on renewal terms. The expiration leaves intelligence officials without this legal framework while Congress remains in recess.
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