Suddenly everyone’s getting along.
The House Intelligence Committee passed a surveillance reform bill Thursday by voice vote, a measure identical to one approved by the House Judiciary Committee the day before.
With the House Intelligence Committee’s approval, the first major reforms to U.S. surveillance law stand a decent chance of becoming law by the end of the year. It also means avoiding a divisive battle on the House floor and spares the Republican leadership in the House from having to take sides.
“The bill reported unanimously today by the Intelligence Committee is a very important step on the road to ending bulk collection and reforming the metadata program,” said California Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff, a member of the intelligence committee, in a statement shortly after the vote. “It is also an indication of the emerging consensus on how to reform our surveillance authorities while preserving the capabilities we need to protect our nation.”
The effort to reform the U.S. government’s surveillance powers once looked like it was shaping up to be a turf battle between supporters and critics of the National Security Agency’s telephone metadata program. The metadata program collects, in bulk, records indicating the time, duration and numbers involved in phone calls.
The scope of the program was first revealed last June by a secret foreign intelligence surveillance court order leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden. Last July, the House came within a handful of votes of defunding section 215 of the Patriot Act, the authority the U.S government uses to justify the program as legal.
Now both sides of the NSA fight seem to have come together. Wisconsin Republican Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner introduced a sweeping surveillance reform bill last October, dubbed the USA Freedom Act. Sensenbrenner and his allies on the House Judiciary Committee sacrificed much of that proposal to gain the support of their colleagues.
That the House Intelligence Committee abandoned its proposal in favor of Sensenbrenner’s indicates just how much the two camps have converged. Though the bill no longer represents the kind of across-the-board changes civil liberties groups were hoping for at the height of the backlash, they are still supporting the measure.









