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Setting the Bar for Intelligence Reform

Michelle Richardson,
Legislative Counsel, ÀÏ°ÄÃÅ¿ª½±½á¹û Washington Legislative Office
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September 26, 2013

Yesterday afternoon, the first shot in the fight for comprehensive intelligence reform was fired.

Sens. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Mark Udall (D-Ore.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), and Rand Paul (R-Ky.) held a press conference to discuss the government's surveillance overreach, staking out what they see as meaningful reform. "We're launching the debate with an actual bill, setting the bar that we think is the real measure of intelligence reform," Wyden said.

The bill they introduced, the , would do many things, but here's the core of it:

  • It would end the bulk collection of Americans' phone records. Sen. Udall reiterated that there is no evidence that the program even works.
  • It would stop the "backdoor searches" of Americans' communications. Under the warrantless surveillance program approved in 2008, the government filters, collects, and stores the content of international communications, even when an American is on one end. This limitation would prevent the NSA from actually using that data unless they can prove to a judge that there is some nexus to terrorism.
  • It would provide for an independent advocate within the FISA Court process, known as a "constitutional advocate," to represent privacy interests.
  • It would ensure that law-abiding Americans impacted by government can have their day in court, constitutionally challenge the government's surveillance, and seek redress.

"These are commonsense reforms that will keep our country safe while still protecting our constitutional rights," said Udall. He added: "Our critics say we cannot protect both safety and privacy, but that is a false choice."

The bipartisan reform package is after "real reform," according to the senators. This is not some sort of "cosmetic reform where you just take the old wine and put it in a new bottle," Sen. Wyden said.

But civil liberties and privacy aren't the only things NSA surveillance affects, the senators noted.

Sen. Wyden argued that the NSA's surveillance authorities don't protect U.S. national security, but harm it.

"When friendly governments begin to question their relationship with the American intelligence community," he said, "there are serious, serious national security implications."

Sen. Udall noted that intelligence reform was critical to maintaining international trust in American business—a point we've made before.

As Sen. Wyden stressed over and over again during the press conference, the privacy hawks have "exceptional momentum." And as he made clear, the American people "If you had told me six months ago that somebody would come up to me in a barbershop and ask me about the FISA Court, I would have said, ‘You know, right.'"

Case in point: This afternoon, the Senate Intelligence Committee will hold a rare , and the Senate Judiciary Committee will continue its oversight series next Wednesday morning.

During a time when the White House and the intelligence community argue over and over again that Americans have to trade some of their civil liberties and privacy for security, Sen. Wyden insisted that "Liberty and security are not mutually exclusive."

We couldn't agree more.

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