Senate Leaders Propose Extending NSA Phone Records Storage
Source: Associated Press
WASHINGTON Apr 22, 2015, 11:24 AM ET
By KEN DILANIAN AP Intelligence Writer
Associated Press
Weeks before a key surveillance law expires, Senate Republicans have introduced a bill that would allow the National Security Agency to continue collecting the calling records of nearly every American.
The measure by Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and intelligence committee Chairman Richard Burr would bypass Senate committees and reauthorize sections of the Patriot Act, including the provision under which the NSA is requiring phone companies to turn over the "to and from" records of most domestic landline calls.
After the program was disclosed in 2013 by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, President Barack Obama and many lawmakers called for legislation to end that collection, but a bill to do so failed last year. Proponents had hoped that the expiration of the Patriot Act provisions on June 1 would force consideration of such a measure.
A bipartisan group of House members is set to introduce such legislation later Wednesday, dubbed the USA Freedom Act. But the move by McConnell and Burr shows that there is support in the leadership for maintaining the status quo. Congressional aides, who declined to be quoted speaking about internal deliberations, said the rise of the Islamic State group and the threat of extremists returning to the U.S. after fighting in Syria has shifted the political climate toward more tolerance of surveillance.
Critics denounced the move by Senate Republicans.
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