Critics Blast 'Compromises' as Patriot Act Barrels Toward Sunset

With the sunset of key spy powers on the near horizon and lawmakers scrambling to save them, privacy and internet freedom groups are dialing up the pressure on Congress to end mass surveillance as we know it.

The Senate will return to Washington, D.C. for a rare session on Sunday, on the heels of a week-long Memorial Day recess. With sections of the Patriot Act barreling toward a 12am June 1 expiration, lawmakers are reportedly scrambling to come up with a last-minute deal to save the law after a series of Senate votes on Friday failed to resolve an impasse.

The debate over the National Security Agency’s (NSA) spy powers has some senators pushing to kill the Patriot Act entirely and others advocating for “clean” re-authorization.

Still others—backed by the White House—in favor of the USA Freedom Act, so-called reform legislation that privacy advocates say doesn’t go far enough. That bill would renew three expiring Patriot Act powers while ending the NSA’s controversial bulk collection of U.S. phone records. Records would be held by phone companies instead.

This week, Sens. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Richard Burr (R-N.C.) have both floated “compromise” bills in an effort to break Senate gridlock. But neither appears to be getting much traction.

The Hill describes both pieces of legislation:

And, as Kevin Gosztola wrote this week at Firedoglake, Feinstein’s bill—modeled after the Espionage Act—”would not only save spying powers but also codify into law a provision that would expressly enable the government to criminalize any national security whistleblower who may choose to follow the footsteps of NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.”

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