Justin Amash Profile picture
Jun 16, 2019 11 tweets 3 min read Read on X
Last year, President Trump signed into law a bill to give the FBI and NSA extraordinary powers to warrantlessly collect Americans’ communications under Sec. 702 of FISA. This week, the House will consider my amendment to #HR2740, offered with @RepZoeLofgren, to rein in FISA.
This is part of a long-running effort to reform FISA and the Patriot Act—an effort that is being undermined by the Trump administration. Later this year, we’ll have an opportunity to challenge Sec. 215 of the Patriot Act.
Since before the Trump administration, I’ve been leading a bipartisan coalition in Congress fighting the government’s efforts to expand the ability of agencies like the FBI and NSA to collect Americans’ communications without a warrant.
Our primary concern has never been about particular individuals in government who use surveillance authorities; our focus is on limiting the authorities and adding safeguards so that Americans’ rights are protected *regardless* of who in government is doing the surveillance.
The reason for this focus is obvious: We can’t guarantee the government will always hire employees who will respect the people’s rights, so we have to ensure that the law prevents whoever is in government from violating the Constitution or acting without sufficient oversight.
The White House is undermining this effort to fight unconstitutional surveillance by instead framing surveillance concerns as a problem with particular individuals at the FBI, as if protecting Americans’ rights is just about hiring the right personnel, instead of changing FISA.
The Trump administration’s narrative allows the White House to complain about FISA abuse while at the same time fighting those of us in Congress who are actually trying to change the laws to prevent unconstitutional spying on Americans.
In 2018, we voted on FISA 702, and I offered an amendment to limit warrantless collection of Americans’ communications. Instead of supporting that amendment, the White House issued a veto threat, and Trump ultimately signed a FISA 702 bill that creates even more privacy problems.
The 2018 bill reauthorized Sec. 702 of FISA for six years—a section that allows for the warrantless collection of Americans’ communications. In his statement after signing the bill, Pres. Trump’s only criticism was that he’d prefer that the bill reauthorize Sec. 702 permanently.
Because the White House prevented us from fixing these issues last year, this week I’m offering an amendment to #HR2740 to narrow the government’s collections under FISA, limiting the warrantless gathering of Americans’ communications.
If the administration is serious about FISA abuse, then they’ll support my amendment to rein in FISA—to better ensure that the government protects the privacy of all Americans in accordance with the Constitution.

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More from @justinamash

Jan 3, 2023
I’m not a current member of Congress, but I do know what’s at stake. I’d gladly serve as speaker of the House for one term to show people the kind of legislative body we can have if someone at the top actually cares about involving every representative in the work of legislating.
Though he’s had trouble securing universal Republican support, the leading contender for speaker of the House remains Kevin McCarthy, which is sad. Even the people pledging to vote for him know that he’s totally unqualified and unfit to be speaker.
While McCarthy’s awful voting record tells you a lot about his philosophy, critical to the role of speaker is a particular aspect of a person’s philosophy that isn’t always apparent from votes: the person’s commitment to a deliberative legislative process.
Read 25 tweets
Jun 10, 2022
Several states demanded amendments to the Constitution to protect individual rights, so the Bill of Rights was proposed as a compromise to keep the Union intact. Ratifying the Second Amendment strengthened the arguments made by James Madison in Federalist No. 46:
“The only refuge left for those who prophesy the downfall of the State governments is the visionary supposition that the federal government may previously accumulate a military force for the projects of ambition.…
“…The reasonings contained in these papers must have been employed to little purpose indeed, if it could be necessary now to disprove the reality of this danger.…
Read 19 tweets
Apr 27, 2022
Here’s why I don’t get the angst over @elonmusk and @Twitter: Almost everyone recognizes that Twitter is increasingly dysfunctional. Much of the dysfunction stems from the company’s choice to prioritize engagement over open discourse. This also drives factionalism and extremism.
Musk can do what a public company can’t: risk profits to restore the original spirit of Twitter. The current algorithm invites audience capture, which causes most of the strain here. The problem is systemic. You can’t ban enough accounts to fix it. The system creates antagonism.
In many ways, it reminds me of the dysfunction of recent Congresses. Congressional leaders have adopted a system that prohibits broad legislative participation, prioritizing election wins over representation. This design produces performance artists instead of legislators.
Read 6 tweets
Sep 1, 2021
You can’t simply decouple the decision to withdraw from the expected outcome of a withdrawal. The primary argument for staying in Afghanistan has always been that any departure would be dangerous for Americans and Afghans alike, which is why this f***ing war has lasted 20 years.
Every exit was going to look ugly. Waiting for ideal conditions—ease of transit and probable safety for all, including Afghans—means waiting forever, never leaving. A president committed to leaving must be willing to move forward despite the likely calamitous short-run outcomes.
Biden deserves criticism. He made plenty of errors and was way too confident. But it’s not at all clear the exit would have been better with a different approach or timing. And I say that as someone who thinks he waited far too long to evacuate Americans and our Afghan partners.
Read 4 tweets
Jun 16, 2021
As Libertarians, we champion due process. There’s only one legitimate executive committee of @LPNH, and that’s the one elected in March.
With that said, we need more professionalism and accountability from state affiliates. Official social media accounts are for advancing the party’s mission of organizing libertarians, not for personal experiments in edgelording.
But horrible messaging can’t amount to a “constructive resignation” of officers. If the party has serious issues with an affiliate, then changes need to be made through proper channels, not by unilateral decree.
Read 4 tweets
Feb 4, 2021
There’s a general misunderstanding of how House committee assignments work. The entire House votes to put each and every member on the particular committees. Though this typically happens via a voice vote (not roll call), it’s done through a normal resolution passed on the floor.
In other words, a committee assignment is not literally decided just by your own party. The whole House must approve it.
To put this in context, Rep. Greene was assigned to her committees via this resolution, which was approved by all Republicans and Democrats. congress.gov/bill/117th-con…
Read 5 tweets

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