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Senate Approves the "Freedom Act" without McConnell/Burr Amendments in 67 to 32 Vote
By Julian Hattem - 06/02/15 04:18 PM EDT
The Senate on Tuesday sent legislation reforming the nations surveillance laws to President Obamas desk days after a stalemate caused the National Security Agencys powers to lapse.
The 67-32 vote for the USA Freedom Act came more than 36 hours after three parts of the Patriot Act expired, which caused the NSA to wind down its programs.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) suffered a political blow during the bruising fight over the legislation known as the USA Freedom Act. He and other hawkish Republican senators opposed the bill even after it was approved by the House in a broad, bipartisan vote.
Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) lambasted McConnell for the lapse in the Patriot Act provisions, arguing it never would have happened if the GOP leader hasnt spent so much time on trade legislation in the previous month.
Adding further insult to McConnells injury, he saw all three of the amendments to the legislation he supported die on Tuesday.
McConnell was also thwarted by Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), the presidential candidate and his erstwhile ally.
Paul blocked several efforts by McConnell to extend the existing authority for the NSA powers before the Memorial Day recess, which all but ensured a lapse in the authority. Paul has made opposing the NSA a central part of his presidential campaign, but his efforts over the last few weeks clearly irritated many of his Senate colleagues.
Passage of the law is a significant victory for critics of the NSA, as for the first time since that post-9/11 national security law was passed, Congress voted to affirmatively rein in the nations surveillance powers.
Fittingly, passage of the legislation which would end the National Security Agencys (NSA) controversial collection of bulk records about Americans phone calls came almost exactly two years to the day that government leaker Edward Snowden first revealed the existence of the program to the world.
Its an historic moment, Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) one of the authors of the bill said immediately after the vote. Its the first major overhaul in government surveillance laws in decades and add significant privacy protections for the American people.
Once President Obama signs the bill which is likely to be quickly three parts of the Patriot Act that expired at midnight on Sunday would go back online, bringing with them authorities that the government says are critical to protecting the nation.
The legislation will end the NSAs collection of phone metadata which include the phone numbers involved in a call as well as the time a phone call occurred and the length of the call. The NSA program does not collect the actual content of peoples conversations.
Nobodys civil liberties are being violated here, McConnell insisted moments before the vote.
The bill will also limit other types of data collection, as well as add new transparency measures and place a new expert panel on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which oversees intelligence activities but currently only hears the governments side of an argument.
The House passed the legislation 338-88 last month, which many saw as a ringing endorsement of its reforms.
The bill hit a series of snags in the Senate, however.
After lawmakers in the upper chamber initially blocked it and a short-term measure offered by McConnell, the Senate was forced to return for a rare Sunday evening vote, mere hours before the spying powers lapsed. But McConnell was outplayed by Paul a candidate for president who forced the temporary lapse.
More at.......
http://thehill.com/policy/national-security/243791-senate-approves-nsa-reforms
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Senate Approves the "Freedom Act" without McConnell/Burr Amendments in 67 to 32 Vote (Original Post)
KoKo
Jun 2015
OP
Historic NY
(37,796 posts)1. McConnell like most Republicans can't lead..........
he just got some Democrat rope-a-dope.