CA, US & World
FISA Section 702 Spying Powers Hurtling Toward Expiration Amid Intense Bipartisan Battle Over Bill Pulte DNI Appointment
WASHINGTON — A cornerstone of the United States intelligence-gathering apparatus is on the verge of expiring at midnight on Friday, June 12, 2026, after intense partisan gridlock and a highly controversial executive appointment upended long-term reauthorization efforts. Congress has failed to approve a legislative extension for Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, a powerful electronic spying tool that allows national security agencies to intercept the phone calls, text messages, and digital communications of foreign targets located outside the country without a warrant.
The legislative process imploded after President Donald Trump announced that Bill Pulte, the current director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, would be elevated to serve as the acting Director of National Intelligence starting June 19, 2026. Pulte, who has no demonstrated intelligence, defense, or foreign policy experience, has drawn fierce condemnation from congressional Democrats. Lawmakers point out that Pulte previously utilized his housing post to urge federal investigations against the president's political opponents. Following the appointment, a previously negotiated three-year bipartisan reauthorization deal fell apart, and a subsequent procedural vote failed in the Senate, while a fast-tracked short-term extension collapsed in the House.
With House Republicans scheduled to leave Washington for a planned recess, House Speaker Mike Johnson defended his decision not to force further votes, blaming Democrats for holding critical national security programs hostage over an executive appointment. Johnson expressed deep concern over leaving the nation vulnerable during a period of heightened international and domestic instability, citing elevated political violence and an intensifying conflict between the United States and Iran. Conversely, intelligence officials note that while a statutory expiration creates severe legal friction and political uncertainty, the National Security Agency can technically maintain collection through March 2027 due to an annual operational recertification granted by the secret FISA Court earlier this year.
Civil liberties advocates from both ends of the political spectrum have used the current standoff to reiterate their long-standing demands for structural reform, particularly the inclusion of a mandatory judicial warrant requirement before federal agencies can search through the data of American citizens. While Section 702 is legally restricted to targeting foreign nationals abroad, the mass interception of international internet traffic routinely sweeps up millions of communications involving ordinary Americans. Privacy groups argue that the selection of a highly partisan figure with no national security experience to lead the intelligence community highlights the inherent dangers of maintaining an expansive, warrantless surveillance database without independent judicial guardrails.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
June 11, 2026


