Wednesday, June 10, 2026

ANNAL$ OF TRUMPI$TAN: Hopes Dim for Renewing Spy Law as Trump Digs In on Bill Pulte. (Dustin Volz & Robert Jimison, NY Times, June 11, 2026)

From The New York Times:

Hopes Dim for Renewing Spy Law as Trump Digs In on Bill Pulte

Republicans are struggling to extend a powerful surveillance authority set to lapse this weekend after President Trump alienated lawmakers with his choice of acting spy chief.

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President Trump last week named Bill Pulte, a confidant without any national security experience, as acting director of national intelligence.Credit...Eric Lee/The New York Times
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Speaker Mike Johnson met with President Trump and Mr. Pulte at the White House on Tuesday.Credit...Pete Marovich for The New York Times
Democratic aides said it was unlikely that Mr. Trump’s latest post would move any votes before the Friday deadline. Democrats have said that allowing Mr. Pulte, whom they view as a Trump loyalist likely to do the president’s bidding rather than provide unvarnished intelligence assessments, to serve at all in the intelligence role would be untenable.
“The president said that Pulte would be around for a period of time,” said Senator Ron Wyden, Democrat of Oregon and a leading privacy advocate. “That, to me, is unacceptable because it’s going to take us through the elections, and all kinds of things that he wants to do in terms of voting practices that really stomp on the rights of the states and communities like mine, that vote by mail.”
Mr. Wyden tried and failed on Wednesday to win quick passage of a measure to extend the law for nine months and add a warrant requirement, and then a separate proposal to extend it for five weeks with some additional transparency measures. Senator John Cornyn, Republican of Texas, objected to both, signaling that there was no workable path forward for now.
The House was set to vote Thursday on a three-week extension to buy more time for negotiations, but leaders planned to bring it up using special rules that require a two-thirds majority for passage, a threshold that they appeared far short of being able to reach.
Absent passage of an extension, Section 702 will legally terminate at midnight Friday heading into Saturday. The law, however, has a built-in safety net for a temporary lapse that allows the surveillance program to endure until annual certifications issued by the nation’s intelligence court expire, though such a scenario could invite legal challenges. The court recertified the program in March, meaning the N.S.A. could continue to operate the programthrough March 2027 even if the statute were to expire.
The law in question permits the government to collect — from U.S. companies like Google and AT&T, and without a warrant — the private messages of foreigners abroad, even when the targets are communicating with Americans. Congress enacted it in 2008, legalizing a form of a once-secret warrantless wiretapping program created by the Bush administration after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. But it added a “sunset” provision that ensures the law periodically comes up for review and potential modification.
An extension bill would need 60 votes to advance in the Senate — a threshold it just barely reached in 2024, the last time Congress extended Section 702 for more than a handful of weeks. Back then, Section 702 briefly lapsed, as it cleared Congress less than an hour after the midnight deadline and was then quickly signed by President Joseph R. Biden Jr.
Until Mr. Pulte’s nomination, much of the debate about renewing it again had centered on the concerns among civil libertarians over how intelligence analysts and F.B.I. agents may search the raw database of Section 702 intercepts for Americans’ information. If there is a hit, then officials can read the private messages of Americans that were collected without a warrant and use it for investigations.
While there are strict rules for when such queries are permissible, in recent years F.B.I. officials have repeatedly conducted searchesthat were later found to have violated those standards, prompting the bureau to adopt stricter search rules that were codified by Congress during the last renewal debate in 2024. But privacy hawks have continued to demand a fuller warrant requirement for searches.


Dustin Volz writes about cybersecurity and intelligence for The Times. He is based in Washington.

Robert Jimison covers Congress for The Times, with a focus on defense issues and foreign policy.

A version of this article appears in print on June 11, 2026, Section A, Page 15 of the New York edition with the headline: Pulte Pushback Holds Up Renewal of Spy LawOrder Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe




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