The
first legislation aimed specifically at curbing US surveillance abuses revealed
by Edward Snowden passed the House of Representatives on Thursday, with a
majority of both Republicans and Democrats.
But
last-minute efforts by intelligence community loyalists to weaken key language
in the USA Freedom Act led to a larger-than-expected rebellion by members of
Congress, with the measure passing by 303 votes to 121.
The
bill's authors concede it was watered down significantly in recent days, but
insist it will still outlaw the practice of bulk collection of US telephone
metadata by the NSA first revealed by Snowden.
Some
members of Congress were worried that the bill will fail to prevent the
National Security Agency from continuing to collect large amounts of data on
ordinary US citizens.
“Perfect
is rarely possible in politics, and this bill is no exception,” said Republican
Jim Sensenbrenner, who has led efforts on the House judiciary committee to rein
in the NSA.
“In
order to preserve core operations of the intelligence and law enforcement
agencies, the administration insisted on broadening certain authorities and
lessening certain restrictions. Some of the changes raise justifiable concerns.
I don’t blame people for losing trust in their government, because the government
violated their trust.”
Despite
the changes, Sensenbrenner and other influential reformers such as ranking
committee Democrat John Conyers backed passage of the final bill saying it was
an “opportunity to make a powerful statement: Congress does not support bulk
collection.”
But
the revised language lost the support of several influential members of the
judiciary committee who had previously voted for it, including Republicans
Darrell Issa, Ted Poe and Raul Labrador and Democrat Zoe Lofgren.
Issa
also chairs the House oversight committee. Adam Smith, the most senior Democrat
on the armed services committee, also voted against the bill.
“Regrettably,
we have learned that the intelligence community will run a truck through
ambiguity,” said Lofgren during an hour and 15 minutes of debate which preceded
the vote. No amendments were allowed.
After
the vote, Mark Jaycox, a legislative analyst at the Electronic Frontier
Foundation, said: “The bill is littered with loopholes. The problem right now,
especially after multiple revisions, is that it doesn't effectively end mass
surveillance.”
In
a statement, Zeke Johnson, the director of Amnesty International USA's security
and human rights program, said the House had “failed to deliver serious
surveillance reform”.
“People
inside and outside the US would remain at risk of dragnet surveillance. The
Senate should pass much stronger reforms ensuring greater transparency, robust
judicial review, equal rights for non-US persons, and a clear, unambiguous ban
on mass spying. President Obama need not wait. He can and should implement such
safeguards today.”
Senator
Patrick Leahy, the chair of the Senate judiciary committee and the lead
Democratic author of the Freedom Act, said that the actions of the house in
passing it was an “important step towards reforming our nation's surveillance
authorities”which “few could have predicted less than a year ago.”
However,
in a statement issued on Thursday, Leahy expressed disappointment that the
bill, which he had introduced jointly with Sensenbrenner in October, had been
diluted.
He
said: “Today’s action in the House continues the bipartisan effort to restore
Americans’ civil liberties. But I was disappointed that the legislation passed
today does not include some of the meaningful reforms contained in the original
USA Freedom Act. I will continue to push for these important reforms when the
Senate judiciary committee considers the USA Freedom Act next month.”
Senator
Ron Wyden, the Oregon Democrat who has waged an often lonely campaign against
NSA surveillance, said he opposed the House bill in the form that passed on
Thursday. "I am gravely concerned that the changes that have been made to
the House version of this bill have watered it down so far that it fails to
protect Americans from suspicionless mass surveillance," he said.
He
said the Senate version of the bill remained strong, and that he hoped that its
provisions could be preserved.
California
representative Adam Schiff was one of several Democrats who said they were
pleased that the “bill ends bulk collection” but hoped there were opportunities
to strengthen its language on the way to the Senate, particularly to restore an
adversarial role for lawyers to argue against the NSA during secret court
rulings on surveillance.
But
the new language was warmly received by leaders of the House intelligence
committee who had backed a separate bill that would have strengthened
government surveillance rights and had briefly appeared to have been
outmanoeuvred by reformers.
Republican
committee chairman Mike Rogers said the US had been “held hostage by a traitor”
after the Snowden revelations and praised the new bill as a “responsible
solution” to the problem of how to preserve the ability of intelligence
agencies to conduct necessary surveillance.
Ranking
Democrat Dutch Ruppersberger said critics of the new bill, including most civil
liberties campaigners who are anxious it will do little to stop indiscriminate
surveillance, were “trying to scare you with monsters under the bed”.
The
bill was the first vote on a NSA related matter in either the House or Senate
since last July, when Republican congressman Justin Amash failed by 205-217
votes to pass an amendment to an appropriations bill that would have stripped
funding for bulk surveillance.
The
revised USA Freedom Act was supported by the White House. Obama had urged for a
solution to ending bulk collection of telephone metadata in ways that would not
unduly constrain the NSA.
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