OTI Disappointed Congress Passed Short-Term 702 Reauthorization Instead of Passing Real Reform
Today, Congress passed, as part of a bill to fund the government, a short-term reauthorization of Section 702 until January 19, 2018. This short-term reauthorization came after House Leadership鈥檚 failed attempt to force the passage of the House Intelligence Committee鈥檚 controversial Section 702 surveillance expansion and reauthorization bill, the FISA Amendments Reauthorization Act of 2017 (). After a show of overwhelming opposition from , , and American citizens, House Leadership pulled the bill from consideration.
While preferable to the House Intelligence Committee鈥檚 bill, a short-term reauthorization should not enable leadership to prevent a vote on meaningful reforms that enjoy widespread support, like ending 鈥渁bouts鈥 collection and warrantless searches for Americans鈥 communications. When the four weeks are up, a real reform bill should be given time on the floor for a full, robust debate, and an up-or-down vote.
The following quote can be attributed to Robyn Greene, policy counsel and government affairs lead, 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 Open Technology Institute:
鈥淧assing a short-term extension instead of a real reform bill that would limit intrusive surveillance and stop warrantless searches for Americans鈥 communications is a dereliction of Congress鈥 duty. When this one-month extension is over, Congress must answer the calls for reform that the public has been making since the Snowden leaks began four years ago, and finally pass a bill that will rein in Section 702 surveillance.鈥