Congress extends surveillance law for 15 days
Following an appeal from President George W. Bush on Monday, the U.S. Congress
has granted a temporary extension to a controversial law that allows the government
to conduct telephone surveillance on suspected terrorists.
On Tuesday Congress voted to extend for 15 days The
Protect America Act, which allows the U.S.
National Security Agency to intercept phone calls and e-mail of suspected
terrorists without first obtaining a court warrant. The act was due to expire
Friday, but Bush called for its extension Monday during his final State of the
Union address.
The debate to extend the act was led by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid,
a Nevada Democrat. His efforts to extend the act for 30 days began Monday; by
late Tuesday, Congress decided on a 15-day extension by a voice vote. Some Democratic
lawmakers were in favor of only a temporary extension because they wanted time
to consider a more permanent measure.
Bush and some Republican lawmakers were hoping for longer extension of the
act, which also provides legal protection for telecommunications carriers that
are cooperating with the NSA. Without protection, the carriers face privacy
lawsuits from those under surveillance.
The Protect America Act has been surrounded by controversy since Bush signed
it in August. Congress is expected to continue debating whether to renew the
act or to give carriers immunity from legal proceedings -- or compromise on
some combination of both -- during the 15-day extension period.
IDG News Service
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