Narrow
defeat for Amash amendment to restrict NSA surveillance
First
major challenge to NSA's bulk collection of phone records defeated by
only 217 votes to 205 in House of Representatives
24
July, 2013
The
first major legislative challenge to the National Security Agency's
bulk collection of phone records from millions of Americans was
defeated by only a narrow margin on Wednesday, sending a clear signal
to the Obama administration that congressional anger about the extent
of domestic surveillance is growing.
Despite
a concerted lobbying effort by the White House and senior
intelligence figures, the attempt to rein in the NSA failed by only
12 votes. The final vote was 205 in favor and 217 against, exposing
deep restiveness in Congress over the wisdom and constitutionality of
the bulk surveillance on Americans less than two months after the
Guardian exposed it thanks to leaks from whistleblower Edward
Snowden. A shift of seven votes would have changed the outcome.
Civil
libertarians disappointed by the vote promised not to relent in
opposing what they consider an unnecessary and unconstitutional
violation of Americans' privacy.
The
principal author of the effort, Michigan Republican Justin Amash,
said he introduced his amendment to the annual Defense Department
appropriations bill to "defend the fourth amendment, to defend
the privacy of each and every American."
In
opposition, the chairman of the House intelligence committee, Mike
Rogers of Michigan, asked: "Have we forgotten what happened on
September 11?" Swiping at Amash, he asked: "Are we so small
we can only look at how many Facebook likes we have?"
Congressman
Mac Thornberry, a Texas Republican on the intelligence committee,
called the abridgment of the NSA's power "foolhardy,"
terming it an "overreaction that increases the danger" from
terrorism.
The
measure, known as the Amash amendment, sought to end the NSA's
years-long secret practice of collecting the phone records of
millions of Americans unsuspected of any crime or foreign
intelligence threat. Senator Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, said the
effort dangerously provided the NSA with a "human relationship
database," something as or potentially more intrusive than the
contents of Americans' phone calls.
Members
of Congress of both parties opposed to the bulk NSA surveillance
compared it to general warrants issued by the British colonists. The
raucous and passionate debate exposed deep divisions in Congress over
the propriety of the surveillance, contrary to assertions by the
Obama administration and its allies that Congress had already granted
its approval for the effort before it became public.
The
Obama administration, the intelligence agencies and their allies in
Congress made an all-out push to quash the amendment after it
unexpectedly made it past the House rules committee late on Monday.
They argue that accumulating the phone records of Americans is the
only way to discover connections to international terrorism inside
the United States. "If you're looking for the needle in the
haystack, you have to have the entire haystack to look through,"
deputy attorney general James Cole testified last week.
For
four hours on Tuesday, General Keith Alexander, the director of the
NSA, implored legislators that preventing his agency from collecting
the phone records on millions of Americans would have dire
consequences for national security.
The
White House entered the fray on Tuesday night, taking the unusual
step of publicly objecting to a proposed amendment to a bill. Hours
before the House began consideration of the Amash amendment, the US
director of national intelligence, James Clapper, warned legislators
that "acting in haste to defund the Fisa business records
program risks dismantling an important intelligence tool."
Clapper
called for an "open and candid discussion about foreign
surveillance authorities and careful consideration of the potential
effect of limiting the Intelligence Community's capabilities under
these authorities." Earlier this month, Clapper apologized to
the Senate intelligence committee for untruthfully testifying in
March that the NSA was "not wittingly" collecting data on
millions of Americans.
While
most contentious House votes in recent years have been marked by
partisanship, the Amash amendment crossed party lines. Obama was
joined in opposing Amash by seven Republican committee chairmen in
the House, the Wall Street Journal, the conservative thinktank the
Heritage Foundation, and an array of Bush-era national security
officials, some of whom helped design the phone-records collection
program.
"Denying
the NSA such access to data will leave the nation at risk," read
a letter to Congress signed by retired general Michael Hayden, the
former NSA director and chief architect of the warrantless
surveillance; former attorneys general Alberto Gonzales and Michael
Mukasey; former CIA director and House intelligence committee
chairman Porter Goss; former director of national intelligence John
Negroponte; Freedom House trustee Diana Villers Negroponte; and
former National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley.
For
his part, Amash, a Republican, was joined by a coalition of
libertarian Republicans and progressive Democrats. His amendment's
principal Democratic ally was longtime Michigan representative John
Conyers, the ranking member of the House judiciary committee.
Applause broke out from either side of the party aisle for speakers
both for and against the Amash amendment.
Conyers
called the amendment an effort merely to "curtail the ongoing
dragnet" surveillance, supported by congressman James
Sensenbrenner, a Republican and principal sponsor of the Patriot Act
under which the NSA claims authority for its bulk phone records
surveillance.
"The
time has come to stop it," Sensenbrenner said.
Joe
Barton, a Texas Republican, said it was "simply wrong" for
the NSA, which he called well-intentioned, to "collect the data
in the first place of every phone call of every American every day."
Meanwhile,
a Democratic leadership announcement of the Amash amendment described
the bulk phone records collection program as harvesting data from
people "not already subject to an investigation."
Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi voted no.
In
opposition to the Amash amendment, Tom Cotton, an Arkansas Republican
and Iraq war veteran, said, "Folks, we are at war. You might not
like that truth. I wish we were not at war. But it is the truth."
Ahead
of the vote, Mike Pompeo, a Kansas Republican, offered a seeming
alternative to Amash's amendment, albeit one that "clarified"
NSA could collect no content from Americans rather than abridge the
NSA phone records collection. It was supported by surveillance hawks
to forestall Amash's "knee-jerk" effort, said Dutch
Ruppersberger, the top Democrat on the intelligence committee.
It
succeeded by a wide margin, having 15 minutes for members to vote.
Legislators had only two minutes to vote for the Amash amendment
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