Published time: June 20,
2014 16:55
AFP Photo/Karen Bleier
In what’s being billed as a
momentum boost for anti-surveillance advocates, the US House of Representative
on Thursday approved an amendment that significantly reigns in warrantless
searches on Americans’ communication records.
By a vote of 293 to 123, a
bipartisan coalition in the House voted to ban the National Security Agency
from conducting “backdoor searches” on United States citizens, a process that
allowed the intelligence community to collect data on Americans without a
warrant as long as the official target was a foreigner. The program was first
revealed by the Guardian, through documents leaked by Edward Snowden.
The NSA has argued that when
a US citizen engages in communication with a foreigner it has targeted for
surveillance, the spy agency can legitimately store the data – email, phone,
and text conversations – in a database and search through it at any time for
information on US citizens. The House vote comes amid rising concerns over the
potential for the NSA to continue expanding its collection of data on
Americans.
According to the Huffington
Post, the amendment “specifically prohibits the NSA from using
information identifying U.S. citizens to search communications data it collects
under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.”
Additionally, the House
voted to ban the NSA from installing backdoor search capability into the
hardware and software of other companies, which has allowed the agency to gain
easy access to customer communications data.
"I think people are
waking up to what's been going on," amendment's sponsor,
Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), told the Post. "Whether you're
Republican or Democrat -- because, if you noticed, a majority of Republicans
voted for this, as well as a majority of Democrats."
Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY)
(T.J. Kirkpatrick/Getty Images/AFP)
The action by the House also
comes in the wake of a previous vote that authorized the USA Freedom Act, which
aimed to block the NSA’s bulk collection of metadata but was significantly
watered down after negotiations with the White House and the intelligence
community. Loopholes were put in place to allow continued surveillance and, as
RT reported in May, other provisions were removed that forced civil liberties
advocates to drop their support for the bill.
The most recent amendment
reinstated the provisions that were cut out previously and, as a result, earned
the backing of the American Civil Liberties Union, Google, and others.
“Tonight's overwhelming vote
to rein in the NSA's backdoor access to Americans' data signals widespread
discontent amongst House members over how the USA Freedom Act was watered down
by the House leadership in secret negotiations with the intelligence
community,” Kevin Bankston, policy director at the New America Foundation's
Open Technology Institute, said to the Daily Beast.
Aware that the restrictions
won’t take effect unless they are approved by Congress as a whole, Bankston
urged the Senate to pass a similar measure as a comprehensive defense
appropriations bill makes its way to President Obama’s desk.
Despite the overwhelming
passage, the amendment faced numerous obstacles before its passage. Massie told
the Post that House leaders did not lend their support, and that it was only by
having bipartisan co-sponsors that it was able to come up for a vote.
As noted by the Daily Beast,
NSA supporters also criticized the quick rush to vote on the amendment,
believing the agency’s behavior is within the confines of the law and that
weakening it will also diminish the US’ national security.
“We shouldn't be doing this
on an appropriations bill after only 10 minutes of debate,” said Rep. Dutch
Ruppersberger (D-MD).
Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger
(D-MD). (AFP Photo/Mandel Ngan)
Speaking with the Guardian,
ACLU deputy legal director Jameel Jaffer argued that regardless of who the
NSA’s official targets are, the ends don’t justify the means when it comes to
searching the private records of US citizens.
"The mere fact that the
government’s 'targets' are foreigners outside the United States cannot render
constitutional a program that is designed to allow the government to mine
millions of Americans’ international communications for foreign intelligence
information," he said.
Whether or not an
appropriations bill containing the amendment’s strong language makes its way to
Obama remains to be seen, however. Massie was pleased with the vote, but
acknowledged that getting the Senate onboard and merging the two versions in
conference will be a challenge.
"That's going to be the
trick," he told the Post. "It would take somebody to support
it on the Senate side as well, and in conference.”
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