House Democrats Block Vote on FISA Extension

As regular readers know, the Senate has passed an extension of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act by a bipartisan vote of 68-29. The legislation is critical to ensuring that our intelligence agencies can listen to foreign terrorists abroad as they communicate with other foreign terrorists abroad, and without having to resort to a court order. The practical effect of the expiration of FISA surveillance authority?

The House’s lack of action meant that at midnight on Feb. 16, the nation’s terrorist surveillance law expired. At that moment, intelligence officials who spend their days listening in on phone calls between terrorists overseas were legally barred from following new leads without first following outdated and cumbersome warrant procedures – even if neither caller is calling from within the U.S. The consequences of inaction are real. Today, if someone in a previously unknown terror cell calls an eager new recruit in London, our agents will have to hang up the phone, apply for a warrant and hope for the best.

Considering that there is a bipartisan majority in the House in support of the measure, one might have expected a vote of support when House Republicans attempted to force a vote on the Senate bill today. One would be wrong, as the House Democratic leadership whipped its Members into line to block a vote. So to sum it up: the Democratic leadership threw its weight around to block a bipartisan majority from getting a vote on a bill they supported to allow surveillance of foreign terrorists. Who says Democrats aren’t credible on national security?

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