Big Brother makes strange bedfellows.
In another sign of mounting bipartisan opposition to government surveillance, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and a leading tea party activist organization, the Tea Party Patriots, have joined forces to sponsor a week-long media blitz pressuring lawmakers to oppose legislation that would reauthorize the National Security Agency’s controversial bulk data collection program.
The unlikely duo’s television ads, which begin Tuesday in Iowa, New Hampshire, and Washington, D.C., call on Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Kelly Ayotte (R-N.H.) to help reform parts of the Patriot Act in order to rein in NSA surveillance of Americans. The provisions of the act that undergird the NSA’s phone record surveillance powers expire on June 1. A federal court ruled this month that the agency’s bulk collection of metadata — information about domestic phone calls, but not their content — is illegal. The three-judge panel declined, however, to order the government to stop the program while Congress debates the issue.
“It’s time for Congress to act to protect Americans’ privacy,” ACLU Executive Director Anthony Romero said in a press release Tuesday. “The courts have found the NSA’s collection and data-mining of citizens’ phone records illegal — now our legislators need to end these practices. It’s time for wholesale reform, not just tinkering around the edges.”
Last week, the U.S. House of Representatives voted 338-88 to take the power to store metadata away from the government and give it to telecom companies, which could then be subpoenaed by the government. The bipartisan, veto-proof majority leaves the Senate with little time and few options to challenge the USA Freedom Act before members of both chambers leave town at the end of the week and the provisions expire.
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