Bipartisan Senate Duo Pressures Obama for Real Surveillance Reform


Republicans and Democrats can't agree on much, but two of them just came together to pressure President Barack Obama to support greater transparency in surveillance reform, goading him to do so both "formally and publicly."
Sens. Al Franken (D-Minn.), who is the chair of the Subcommittee on Privacy, Technology, and the Law, and Dean Heller (R-Nev.) yesterday published a letter to the president explaining, "We fear that unless stronger transparency provisions are included in the USA Freedom Act, the American public will have no way to know if the government is following through on… end[ing] bulk collection of Americans' phone call records, along with prohibiting bulk collection under several other authorities." A watered-down version of the bill passed somewhat controversially through the House in May. The duo suggests three ingredients they think are necessary for "any … surveillance reform bill" to be meaningful:
- Provisions requiring the American government to release annual estimates of the number of individuals and Americans that have had their information collected, and ideally also how many Americans have had their information reviewed;
- Provisions allowing companies to disclose more information about government requests for their customers' information in a more timely manner than provided for in the House bill; and
- Avoiding any reporting requirement or disclosure provision allowing disclosure only in terms of "targets" instead of total individuals affected.

Shortly before the House voted on their version of it, the bill was defanged to the dismay of a bipartisan coalition of lawmakers and advocates. Despite being a co-sponsor, Rep. Justin Amash voted against it, decrying that the changed "bill maintains and codifies a large-scale, unconstitutional domestic spying program. It claims to end 'bulk collection' of Americans' data only in a very technical sense."
Ostensibly, the president supports the end of bulk collection, but David Kravets of Ars Technica suggested at the time of the House vote that "the Obama administration pressured the Republican leadership to water it down." The Hill's Kate Tummarrello laid blame equally on the GOP and the president.
Franken and Heller are turning up the heat on Obama in anticipation of the Freedom Act's consideration by the Senate, which they say will happen "soon."
In a separate release this week, Franken expressed support for the current Senate version of the bill, but warned that he will vote against it if changes are made that "undercut transparency, or that undercuts any of the other oversight and accountability provisions that are necessary for a successful surveillance reform effort."
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And here all this time I thought the people's representatives in Congress were already kept well apprised of the state of domestic intelligence gathering. Isn't that transparency enough?
"Senator Al Franken"
My goodness, what a sad collection of words.
That some low-grade alt-text right there given the subject matter.
so is this committee now suppose to sue Obama, too? Because if Stuart is looking for transparency, he's looking in the wrong direction.
It's hard to govern with you little piss ants always bugging me, so just sue me then!
/der fuehrer
Holy Crap! Al Franken did something I like! He must have done some affirmations in the mirror this morning!
I would hold off judgment until you see the final product.
election year dontcha know.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0ZfQ3QQY0A
What's funny, is that the women at the beginning of the ad is the owner of a Blaine company called Top Tool.
DING DING DING. Bet he remembers to pay his taxes again this year.
"I'm good enough, I'm smart enough, and doggone it I CAN turn back the tide of oppressive state surveillance!"
Isn't the conversation already moot at this point?
We're looking at unconstitutional activity by a Federal entity. The debate shouldn't be about how to water it down the debate should be about how quickly and permanently to end it.
Alt-Caption for the Obama pic "So SUE me"
The Freedom Act LOL. Oh government, you and your terribly ironic euphemisms...
Whenever I head the words "Bipartisanship" I go for my wallet.
As do they.
He probably knows he can't expect a pickup load of ballots to show up just in time for a recount any more. Even Minnesotans are on to that stuff by now.