S-4444-119
Read twice and referred to the Select Committee on Intelligence.
Sponsored by Ron Wyden (D-OR)
What it does
This bill would extend the expiration date of Title VII of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) — specifically Section 702, which authorizes warrantless surveillance of foreign targets overseas — from April 30, 2026 to May 21, 2026, a three-week extension. It would also require the Director of National Intelligence, in consultation with the Attorney General, to publicly release a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) opinion dated March 17, 2026 regarding Section 702 certifications, with redactions permitted to protect intelligence sources and methods.
Who benefits
Intelligence agencies (NSA, CIA, FBI) that rely on Section 702 collection to continue operations without interruption. Technology and telecommunications companies that receive legal certainty about compliance obligations during the gap period. Congressional negotiators who gain additional time to craft a longer-term reauthorization. Civil liberties advocates and the general public who would gain access to a previously secret FISC court opinion. Journalists and researchers studying surveillance law.
Who is hurt
U.S. persons whose communications may be incidentally collected under Section 702 — the extension continues that authority without new privacy protections. Privacy and civil liberties organizations that oppose any extension without accompanying reforms. Legislators who prefer a clean lapse to force a more comprehensive reauthorization debate. Foreign nationals targeted under Section 702 who would continue to be subject to surveillance.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that allowing Section 702 to lapse — even briefly — would create a dangerous gap in the intelligence community's ability to monitor foreign threats, including terrorism and foreign adversary communications. They contend that a short extension is a responsible bridge to a longer-term reauthorization, preventing operational disruption while Congress completes its deliberations. The mandatory declassification provision, they argue, advances transparency by requiring public release of a FISC opinion that may reveal how the court has interpreted the scope of Section 702 authority.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that short-term extensions have been used repeatedly to avoid the hard work of meaningful surveillance reform, allowing a program with documented civil liberties concerns — including warrantless "backdoor searches" of Americans' communications — to continue without adequate oversight. They contend that the three-week window is too narrow to produce genuine reform and that the declassification provision, while positive, is insufficient given that the DNI retains broad redaction authority that could render the released opinion largely uninformative.