Nineteen Republicans joined Democrats in the House to block floor consideration of legislation Wednesday that would have extended controversial, expiring surveillance powers.
The 228-183 procedural vote is the latest setback on a long-term extension of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act and the third time House lawmakers have tried and failed to renew the measure.Â
With Wednesdayâs vote, the House slammed the breaks on extending Section 702 powers before they are set to expire on April 19. Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., had warned lawmakers that if the House didnât act on the legislation â which includes changes meant to strengthen oversight of a program thatâs been implicated in abuses like improper spying on Black Lives Matter protesters â the Senate was likely to send over a âcleanâ extension.
Johnson said after the vote that Republicans would âregroup and reformulate another planâ on the extension of Section 702.
While privacy advocates have criticized Section 702, national security officials have said itâs the âcrown jewelâ of U.S. intelligence and touted its usefulness in cybersecurity investigations.
In advance of the vote, former President Donald Trump posted a message on Truth Social. âKILL FISA, IT WAS ILLEGALLY USED AGAINST ME, AND MANY OTHERS. THEY SPIED ON MY CAMPAIGN!!!â
The Justice Department has acknowledged that two of the four orders issued under the broader FISA law to conduct surveillance on former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page were invalid, although Section 702 authorities werenât related to those problems.
The procedural vote Wednesday to advance a rule for floor debate would have allowed for a vote on the key change sought by critics of Section 702: a warrant requirement for when U.S. officials query the 702 surveillance database for Americans and people on U.S. soil. Â
Some lawmakers said the bill should already have included a warrant requirement, rather than putting that tweak up for a vote as an amendment. And some faulted Johnson for choosing a House Intelligence Committee-backed extension over a Judiciary-backed bill that included the warrant requirement.
Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, who voted against the rule, said on the floor that âunfortunately, the legislation before us doesnât do whatâs necessary ⌠to secure the peopleâs rights.â
On the Democratic side of the aisle, Rep. Teresa Leger Fernandez, D-N.M., contended that the rule prevented votes on âmany important amendmentsâ to a Section 702 extension.
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