An update on the USA Rights Act.

Hi there,

The House of Representatives just voted to violate the privacy rights of everyone in the United States.

Today, the House held a vote on Section 702, the controversial spying power that allows the government to access the communications of U.S. persons without a warrant.

A group of privacy champions introduced an amendment (the USA Rights Act) that would have put in place robust privacy protections for people in the United States and Americans abroad. Thanks to you, 183 members voted in support of that amendment. That's no small feat.

Unfortunately, the amendment failed and the House renewed Section 702 without this crucial reform. But we put up a good fight.

The House bill to renew Section 702 surveillance will now move to the Senate, where we'll keep fighting to protect your privacy rights.

Thanks for all that you do—

Sandy

P.S. Want to help fund the fight to protect your online privacy? Donate $10 or whatever you can today.

free press action fund
Congress: Overturn the FCC's bad Net Neutrality rules

Don’t let Trump spy on you: Urge Congress to support the USA Rights Act.

Hi there,

Congress has the opportunity to do something brilliant this week. In response to the massive outcry from people like you, we have a last-ditch effort for real, robust surveillance reform. But this won’t happen unless we continue to make a lot of noise.

On Thursday, the House will vote to reauthorize Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. Unfortunately, the underlying bill is terrible and would actually work to expand government surveillance.

BUT leadership has agreed to allow a vote on an amendment, called the USA Rights Act, that would substitute the language in the bill and get us as close to a dream reform bill as we’ve seen since Edward Snowden exposed the extent of government surveillance.

Urge your members of Congress to vote for the USA Rights Act amendment.

To refresh your memory, Section 702 allows the government to monitor the communications of people in the United States without a warrant. While the targets of Section 702 surveillance are supposedly foreign entities, the program allows for dragnet-like monitoring of phone and internet conversations of “United States persons.”1

Privacy advocates call this the “backdoor-search loophole” and the USA Rights Act would fix it.

And not just that — this bill includes a number of crucial safeguards. It includes a “notice requirement” that requires the government to disclose whenever it uses information obtained from 702.

This is critical for defendants to assert their constitutional rights. It also helps ensure that information isn’t being misused for matters unrelated to national security.

The bill would also require the government to provide transparency around the number of people being surveilled. And it would have to be reauthorized after four years to ensure congressional oversight of this powerful authority.

Urge your lawmakers to protect your privacy and support the USA Rights Act.

The fight to curb government surveillance has been an uphill battle to say the least, but this week we have the chance to pass something great and put in place strong privacy protections that would rein in government spying and protect our rights.

Reauthorizing 702 without adopting the critical reforms offered in the USA Rights Act would fundamentally weaken our Fourth Amendment right to privacy.

Tell Congress: Support the USA Rights Act amendment and stop warrantless mass surveillance.

We need to let our members of Congress know that we’re paying attention, and expect them to protect our privacy.

Thanks for all that you do—

Sandy, Lucia, Candace and the rest of the Free Press Action Fund team
freepress.net

P.S. For the past nine years, the government has used a little known national-security law to violate your Fourth Amendment right to privacy. Tell Congress to support the USA Rights Act amendment.

1. “Q&A: U.S. Warrantless Surveillance Under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act,” Human Rights Watch, Sept. 14, 2017: https://act.freepress.net/go/17357?t=13&akid=7801%2E10296224%2Erpznur

The Free Press Action Fund is a nonpartisan organization building a nationwide movement for media that serve the public interest. Learn more at www.freepress.net.

Join us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.


You can unsubscribe from this mailing list at any time.