NSA Backlash Hits Privacy Legislation
Recent disclosures about government surveillance programs have reinvigorated hope for a bill that tightens personal privacy rights and torpedoed chances for another that gives more authority to law enforcement.
The revelations offer an opening for updates to the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, which would require law enforcement to get a warrant before searching personal emails. And despite a push by the Obama administration, members have gone silent on a bill to expand federal wiretapping capabilities — the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act.
While little known beyond Capitol Hill or inner tech circles, the bills help determine the limits of governmental reach in an increasingly digital world. The National Security Agency narrative isn’t tied directly to either issue — the bills focus more on traditional law enforcement’s access to communications data — but it has still rearranged politics over the role authorities play in Americans’ lives online.
“The fact that the public is now aware of this issue — and everything that has come out about the NSA — is likely to cause a lot of people to focus on privacy and in particular online privacy and the privacy of their emails,” Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) said in an interview. “There’s absolutely political will for it.”
More: NSA Backlash Hits Privacy Legislation - Jessica Meyers and Alex Byers