HR-7435-119
Referred to the Subcommittee on Counterterrorism and Intelligence.
Sponsored by Seth Magaziner (D-RI)
What it does
This bill would amend the Homeland Security Act of 2002 to create two new structures inside the Department of Homeland Security (DHS): an Intelligence Transparency and Oversight Program Office and an Intelligence Ombuds. The Ombuds — a senior career employee — would review DHS intelligence activities for objectivity, political independence, and civil rights compliance, and would provide a confidential channel for employees to raise concerns. The Ombuds would submit annual reports to four congressional committees and could report urgent concerns directly to Congress.
Who benefits
DHS intelligence analysts and employees who want a protected, confidential channel to raise concerns about politicization or civil rights abuses without fear of retaliation. Members of the public whose personal data is collected in DHS intelligence activities and who would benefit from stronger civil liberties oversight. Congressional oversight committees that would receive structured annual reporting on DHS intelligence activities. Civil liberties and privacy advocacy organizations. Journalists and researchers seeking greater transparency about DHS intelligence operations.
Who is hurt
DHS leadership and political appointees who may face greater scrutiny of intelligence decisions. Intelligence component heads who would be required to formally respond to Ombuds recommendations within 60 days, adding administrative burden. The Secretary of DHS, who would be required to provide the Ombuds access to departmental information within 60 days of any request. Taxpayers who would bear the cost of staffing and operating the new office, though the bill does not specify an appropriation amount.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that DHS intelligence activities — which touch on terrorism, weapons of mass destruction, and homeland security information — have historically lacked a dedicated, independent internal watchdog focused specifically on politicization and civil liberties. They contend that a career-employee Ombuds with direct reporting authority to Congress fills a structural gap, providing a protected channel for analysts to flag biased or politically influenced intelligence without risking their careers, and that annual public reporting would improve accountability without compromising classified operations.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that DHS already has overlapping oversight mechanisms — including an Inspector General, a Privacy Officer, and an Officer for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties — making a new Ombuds office potentially redundant and bureaucratically duplicative. They contend that granting a career employee direct reporting authority to Congress, bypassing the Secretary and the President, could create friction in the chain of command and undermine the executive branch's ability to manage sensitive intelligence operations, raising separation-of-powers concerns about congressional encroachment into executive branch management.