Following a prior 10-day extension, Congress passed a 45-day clean reauthorization of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, as approved by Senate Majority Leader John Thune. The measure came after stalled talks on longer-term renewals, pushing the deadline further amid debates over warrant requirements and surveillance reforms.
After approving a 10-day extension through April 30, Congress faced renewed pressure as the April deadline for Section 702—allowing warrantless surveillance of non-U.S. persons abroad, with incidental collection of Americans' data—approached without agreement on reforms.
The House had passed a three-year reauthorization without major changes, but Thune declared it “dead on arrival” over an attached central bank digital currency ban, pushing instead for a short clean extension. A three-week proposal by Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) failed unanimous consent after Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) objected to declassifying a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court ruling.
Lawmakers ultimately settled on the 45-day measure despite objections from critics dubbed 'deep staters.' Advocacy groups like the Consumer Choice Center, via James Czerniawski, call for warrants on U.S. persons' data, closing data broker loopholes, and narrowing definitions of electronic communications providers to protect civil liberties without undermining security.
The intelligence community insists Section 702 remains essential, providing key insights for the president’s daily briefing.