HR-8322-119
Became Public Law No: 119-84.
Sponsored by Austin Scott (R-GA)
What it does
This law extends the authorities of Title VII of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) of 1978 — specifically Section 702, which permits warrantless surveillance of foreign targets overseas — through April 30, 2026. It does this by amending the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 to replace a prior expiration date tied to the Reforming Intelligence and Securing America Act with a fixed calendar date. It also updates related transition procedures to align with the new expiration date.
Who benefits
U.S. intelligence agencies (NSA, CIA, FBI) that rely on Section 702 collection to gather foreign intelligence without individual warrants. National security officials who argue the authority is essential to counterterrorism and counterintelligence operations. Lawmakers and executive branch officials who sought to avoid a lapse in surveillance authority. Indirectly, the general public if the authority prevents terrorist attacks or foreign espionage.
Who is hurt
U.S. persons whose communications are "incidentally" collected when they contact foreign targets — a practice that has affected an estimated tens of thousands of Americans annually. Civil liberties advocates who sought to use the expiration deadline as leverage to require warrant protections for queries of U.S. person data. Lawmakers who opposed a clean extension and wanted structural reforms attached. Foreign nationals targeted by the surveillance program who have no legal recourse under U.S. law.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that Section 702 is one of the most valuable foreign intelligence tools available to the U.S. government, credited by intelligence officials with disrupting terrorist plots and tracking foreign adversaries. They contend that allowing the authority to lapse — even briefly — would create dangerous gaps in real-time intelligence collection, and that a short-term extension preserves continuity while Congress works on longer-term reauthorization with any desired modifications.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a clean, short-term extension forfeits congressional leverage to enact meaningful privacy protections, particularly a warrant requirement before the FBI can query Section 702 databases for information about U.S. persons. They contend that the government's own Inspector General and FISA Court have documented repeated compliance violations involving U.S. person data, and that extending the authority without reform perpetuates a surveillance regime that operates with insufficient judicial oversight.
Constitutional context
Section 702 surveillance implicates the Fourth Amendment's protections against unreasonable searches, though courts have generally held that foreign intelligence collection targeting non-U.S. persons abroad falls outside Fourth Amendment protections. The incidental collection of U.S. persons' communications remains constitutionally contested. Under the Youngstown framework, this law places the Executive squarely in Justice Jackson's Zone 1 — acting with maximum authority because Congress has explicitly authorized the surveillance program.
Checks and balances
The Executive branch (intelligence agencies) retains surveillance authority under this extension; checks include FISA Court oversight of targeting and minimization procedures, congressional intelligence committee oversight, and the statutory expiration date of April 30, 2026, which requires Congress to act again to continue the program.
Historical precedent
Section 702 has been reauthorized multiple times since its original enactment in 2008, most recently through the Reforming Intelligence and Securing America Act (2024), which added some new oversight provisions but preserved the core warrantless collection authority.