A key federal spy tool, FISA 702, is at risk of sunsetting unless Congress can pass an extension of the authority before Friday.

A procedural vote failed in the Senate early Friday, and a provision of the spy powers law is set to expire June 12.

Senate Republicans early Friday could not muster enough votes to move forward on a long-term reauthorization of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, leaving…

The Senate voted 47-52 to block FISA Section 702 extension ahead of June 12 expiration, stalling an anti-CBDC provision bundled with the surveillance bill.

The US Senate voted 52-47 against advancing FISA Section 702 reauthorization, with the warrantless surveillance law set to expire June 12, 2026.

A key federal spy tool, FISA 702, is at risk of sunsetting unless Congress can pass an extension of the authority before Friday.

Congress should stop treating reauthorization as a once-every-few-years standoff and move to a shorter, recurring authorization period.

Forty-five days after Congress punted a fight to reauthorize Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, Republican leaders are staring down a new deadline.

A US surveillance law that allows federal authorities to collect the communications of foreigners abroad and search them for Americans’ data without a

Congress is struggling to extend a key surveillance law — in part due to privacy concerns and to Trump's pick of Bill Pulte for spy chief.

Senate Democrats and seven Republicans voted 47-52 to block FISA Section 702 extension ahead of its June 12 expiration, demanding warrant reforms.

WASHINGTON, June 11 — A US surveillance law that allows federal authorities to collect the communications of foreigners abroad and search them for Americans’ data without a...

The House will vote on a short-term extension of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that will extend the program until July 2.

Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act lapses Friday.

Why is FISA stuck? Mike Johnson blamed members of the House Freedom Caucus while John Thune faults Democrats demanding new guardrails against abuse.