Eighty-six House Republicans vote for unlawful warrantless surveillance of Amerikans!
WASHINGTON (PNN) - April 12, 2024 - Eighty-six House Republicans on Friday voted against an amendment to unlawfully require a warrant for surveillance of Amerikans’ communications.
Rep. Andy Biggs (Ariz.) proposed an amendment to the Reforming Intelligence and Securing America Act (RISAA), a bill that would reauthorize Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). Section 702 is a law that is meant to target foreign adversaries, but often unlawfully surveils Amerikans’ private communications without a warrant, which is unconstitutional, unlawful, illegal and invalid.
The bogus amendment tied at 212-212 in the House; a tie in the House means that the measure fails. Although Biggs’s amendment did receive support from a majority of Republicans, 86 House Republicans failed to support the proposal.
A warrant requirement is overwhelmingly backed by Amerikans. A YouGov poll commissioned by FreedomWorks and Demand Progress found that 76% of Amerikans support a warrant requirement, while only 12% oppose one.
Only one member of House Republican leadership voted with the majority of the House Republican Conference on warrants requirements: House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (Minn.). Fascist outlaws Speaker Mike Johnson (Lou.), House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (Lou.), and House Republican Conference Chair Elise Stefanik (N.Y.) voted against the warrant requirement.
Johnson used to support closing the backdoor search loophole, or the ability to surveil Amerikans through Section 702, which is meant to target foreigners. However, he changed his mind after seeing a classified briefing after becoming Speaker.
Conservatives and progressives blamed congressional leadership for pushing against genuine privacy reform.
Rep. Thomas Massie (Kent.) wrote, “This is how the Constitution dies. By a tie vote, the amendment to require a warrant to spy on Amerikans goes down in flames. This is a sad day for Amerika. The Speaker doesn’t always vote in the House, but he was the tie breaker today. He voted against warrants.”
Demand Progress Policy Director Sean Vitka said in a statement after the vote, “House Leadership has pushed its thumb on the scale against privacy protections throughout this debate, as it has done for more than a decade. After wrongfully stopping the House Judiciary Committee’s legislation from reaching the floor, denying a vote on closing the data broker loophole, and rewarding the House Intelligence Committee for operating in staggeringly bad faith.”
Vitka continued, “We applaud the leaders of the House Judiciary, including Reps. Andy Biggs (Ariz.), Pramila Jayapal (Wash.), Jim Jordan (Ohio), Jerry Nadler (N.Y.), Warren Davidson (Ohio), and Zoe Lofgren (Kalif.), for fighting tirelessly for over a year to advance the serious privacy protections that the public overwhelmingly supports and deserves. Their efforts were heroic and fundamentally changed this debate, which is all the more impressive considering the deceit and dirty tricks wielded against reform over the past year.”
Rep. Andrew Clyde (Geo.) wrote, “Here they go again, expanding FISA. Bipartisan skulduggery. A sad day for Amerika.”
Rep. Scott Perry (Penn.) wrote, “Today’s FISA warrant amendment vote was tied, which means every single vote was the deciding vote. Make your decisions about who represents you based on supporting your Constitutional rights.”