The House has narrowly rejected an amendment to the Defense Authorization Bill to restrict NSA spying on Americans:
U.S. lawmakers angry about domestic telephone record-collection lost an effort to curtail funding for the intelligence-gathering tools revealed by fugitive U.S. security contractor Edward Snowden.
On a vote of 205-217, the House rejected an amendment that would have limited the National Security Agency’s ability to collect communications records.
Implementation of the amendment could have created a new burden on telephone and Internet companies to retain bulk data, in addition to ending the NSA’s blanket collection of phone records. Those possibilities led the White House, Republicans leaders and many congressional Democrats to oppose the proposals, pitting them against lawmakers from both parties who champion civil liberties and privacy.
The by-party tally is Democrats (111-83), and Republicans (94-134), a 5 vote margin, and it is almost certainly only because Obama started seriously twisting arms on the Dem side of the aisle in the past 48 hours or so. (My rep, John Sarbanes, voted yes).
Hopefully, this is only the start of the fight, and the next time, the good guys will pick up a few more votes, and win.