[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 141 (Tuesday, November 18, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Page S6027]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
USA FREEDOM ACT
Mr. REID. As I have indicated, this evening we will vote on the
motion to proceed to the bipartisan USA FREEDOM Act, which reforms the
U.S. Government's domestic surveillance authorities under the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, as we have come to call it.
In 2013 the American public first learned that the Federal Government
collected telephone and Internet records of ordinary Americans--even
when those Americans were not suspected of any wrongdoing. Earlier this
year Senator Leahy introduced the USA FREEDOM Act to end this bulk data
collection. This bill has the support of the entire U.S. intelligence
community, including the Director of National Intelligence, Gen. James
Clapper. It enhances privacy and civil liberties protections, and it
continues to give the U.S. intelligence community the ability to gather
the information it needs to help keep America safe.
Two weeks ago the American people sent Congress a simple message:
Let's work together. The USA FREEDOM Act is an excellent opportunity
for Democrats and Republicans to work together to pass legislation that
is good for this country.
The chairman of the Judiciary Committee, Pat Leahy, has done
tremendous work in crafting this bill. I hope we will invoke cloture
today to allow us to proceed to this matter. Chairman Leahy will manage
the bill on the Senate floor in what I hope will be an open, bipartisan
process.
In working to craft this bipartisan legislation, I expect Senators on
both sides will want to offer amendments. Everyone should understand
that there is not going to be any effort to stop this by the procedural
avenue we call tree-filling. Instead, if we get on the legislation, the
bill's managers will address amendments as they are offered. So I hope
Democrats and Republicans will be able to come to agreements for votes
on a number of amendments--hopefully a reasonable number or, of course,
we will have no alternative than to try to terminate that by trying to
get cloture on the bill itself. I am optimistic that we can work
together--I hope so--to forge a compromise and pass this essential
legislation.
____________________