The House and Senate approved a short-term extension of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act early Friday, moving the program’s expiration from April 20 to April 30 after longer renewal plans stalled amid divisions among House Republicans. President Donald Trump signed the extension on Saturday, setting up another high-stakes fight ahead of the new deadline.
Congress moved to avert a lapse in one of the government’s most powerful foreign surveillance authorities by passing a 10-day extension of Section 702 that runs through April 30.
The Senate cleared the measure Friday by voice vote, after the House approved it in the early hours of Friday by unanimous consent, following a chaotic round of votes and procedural setbacks on longer-term legislation.
The stopgap came after competing proposals—a so-called “clean” extension backed by some Republican leaders and a separate longer-term reauthorization plan—ran into resistance from a bloc of House Republicans and from lawmakers demanding stronger privacy protections for Americans whose communications can be swept up when the government targets foreigners abroad.
Section 702, enacted in 2008, allows U.S. intelligence agencies to collect and analyze the communications of non-U.S. persons located overseas without an individual warrant, including when those targets communicate with Americans. The core controversy in Congress centers on what critics describe as “backdoor” searches: government queries of Section 702-collected data using identifiers tied to U.S. persons.
Supporters of the authority, including intelligence and national security officials, argue that Section 702 is critical for detecting threats ranging from terrorism to cyberattacks. In public remarks, FBI Director Christopher Wray has said that, in the first half of 2023, 97% of the FBI’s “raw technical reporting” on cyber actors came from Section 702-derived information.
Officials also point to internal reforms and court oversight as evidence of improved compliance. A declassified April 2023 opinion by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court found the FBI’s compliance rate with the querying standard was above 98% after remedial measures were implemented.
Public reporting by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence shows that FBI “U.S. person queries” have fallen sharply from earlier levels. The FBI reported 119,383 U.S. person queries for calendar year 2022 and 57,094 for 2023.
Civil liberties advocates and some lawmakers counter that the program still permits warrantless access to Americans’ communications in practice, and they have pushed for a requirement that the government obtain a court-approved warrant before running certain queries for U.S.-person information.
The debate has intersected with broader privacy legislation in Congress. In a separate effort, the House in 2024 passed the Fourth Amendment Is Not For Sale Act, a bill aimed at restricting the government’s ability to buy certain sensitive personal data from commercial data brokers without a warrant.
With the April 30 deadline approaching, congressional leaders face renewed pressure to agree on whether to extend Section 702 for months or years—and, if so, what limits to impose on FBI and intelligence agency access to U.S.-person information.