under surveillance message
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An unusual coalition of 13 Republicans and 12 Democrats on Wednesday announced the creation of the House Fourth Amendment Caucus to protect Americans' privacy rights against calls for increased government surveillance in the wake of terrorist attacks. The group named itself after the Fourth Amendment because the lawmakers fear that the government is increasingly seeking the power to search Americans' electronic data without a warrant. They see that as a threat to the Constitutional amendment's protections against unreasonable searches and seizures.

"In the face of difficult circumstances, some are quick to pursue extreme, unconstitutional measures; the Fourth Amendment Caucus will be a moderating influence that gives voice to countless Americans whose rights are violated by these ill-conceived policies," said Rep. Justin Amash, R-Mich., who joined the group led by Reps. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., and Ted Poe, R-Texas.

Privacy rights are one of the rare issues that liberals and libertarian-leaning conservatives in Congress have agreed on. Members of the new coalition oppose legislation that would force U.S. tech companies to build "backdoors" into encrypted smartphones or allow federal agents to view someone's Internet browsing history without a warrant.

"Members of the House of Representatives from both parties are eager to debate and vote on privacy and surveillance issues that are far too often drafted in secret and jammed through the legislative process under tight deadlines, restrictive procedures, and little debate," Lofgren said.


Comment: Legislation that downgrades public rights is often hidden by attachment to other bills, never examined, qualified nor debated. The volume of bills passed is astounding and increasing yearly. One might suspect that this particular aspect is a way to discourage legislators from scrutinizing what they are under deadline to pass.


Privacy rights advocates had been making gains in recent years. Their biggest victory came in 2015 with the passage of the USA Freedom Act, which ended the National Security Agency's controversial mass surveillance of the phone records of millions of Americans with no ties to terrorism.

But recent terrorist attacks in San Bernardino, Orlando and Europe have brought a renewed push in Congress to increase the surveillance powers of U.S. intelligence agencies.

In June, House privacy rights advocates tried to ban warrantless surveillance of Americans' electronic communications and prevent the government from forcing tech companies to build encryption backdoors. The measure failed even though it had been passed by the House twice before. Later that month, the Senate fell just one vote short of passing legislation to allow the FBI to search Americans' Internet browsing histories and email records without a warrant.