Featured

House Reauthorizes Controversial FISA Spying Bill

After a week of Republican infighting, the House has reauthorized the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). Dissenters rallied against warrantless surveillance of Americans, but the vote to reauthorize the program resulted in a 273-147 vote in favor of continuing the program.

Dissenters pointed at a portion of the law called Section 702. This allows U.S. authorities to surveil communications of foreigners outside the United States. The surveillance is collected in a database and authorities are then able to search it without a warrant. However, because those foreigners are often in contact with Americans, domestic data also becomes part of the surveillance collection.

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R) called the bill a reform package that would address abuses of the tool, pointing to the FBI. After a vote that rejected an amendment to expand surveillance in more situations, a new deal was struck, cutting the reauthorization from five years to two years.

Commenting on the deal, Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz (R), who voted against continuing the program, said that the vote would give "President Trump an at bat."

“The previous version of this bill would have kicked reauthorization beyond the Trump presidency. Now President Trump gets an at bat to fix the system that victimized him more than any other American.”

The following lawmakers from Arizona, Florida, and Texas voted in favor of reauthorizing the surveillance program:

Arizona Rep. Juan Ciscomani (R).

Florida Reps. Vern Buchanan (R), Kathy Castor (D), Mario Diaz-Balart (R), Lois Frankel (D), Scott Franklin (R), Carlos Gimenez (R), Laurel Lee (R), Jared Moskowitz (D), John Rutherford (R), Maria Elvira Salazar (R), Darren Soto (R), Mike Waltz (R), Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D), Daniel Webster (R), and Frederica Wilson (D).

Texas Reps. Colin Allred (D), Michael Burgess (R), John Carter (R), Dan Crenshaw (R), Jasmine Crockett (D), Henry Cuellar (D), Monica De La Cruz (R), Jake Ellzey (R), Veronica Escobar (D), Lizzie Fletcher (D), Tony Gonzales (R), Vicente Gonzales (D), Kay Granger (R), Al Green (D), Ronny Jackson (R), Michael McCaul (R), Nathaniel Moran (R), August Pfluger (R), Pete Sessions (R), Marc Veasey (D), and Roger Williams (R).

After the vote, Speaker Johnson announced that he would be traveling to Mar-a-Lago to meet with President Donald Trump (R). Both are scheduled to host a press conference on election integrity.

Daniel Molina

Daniel Molina is a managing editor and legislative correspondent with a decade of experience covering the evolving political landscape of the American South and Southwest.

Recent Posts

Media Miss, Political Theater: Shutting Plants Won't Clean Joppa's Air

A recent editorial from The Dallas Morning News calls for aggressive action against two Dallas…

1 day ago

President Trump Appears to Pull Endorsement of Tony Gonzales

As President Donald Trump readies himself to address voters in Corpus Christi, Texas, he has…

2 days ago

Pentagon Used Laser to Mistakenly Take Down CBP Drone

On Feb. 26, the Pentagon shot down “a seemingly threatening” drone in southwest Texas that…

2 days ago

John Cornyn Introduces 'Need for Speed Act,' Improving Highway Management

U.S. Senator John Cornyn (R) has introduced the Need for Speed Act, legislation that would…

2 days ago

LONESTAR — 2.27.2026 — Cardi B Endorses Jasmine Crockett — James Talarico Gains Ground in Senate Race — and More...

Cardi B Endorses Jasmine Crockett for U.S. Senate Texans are heading to the polls ahead…

2 days ago

Senate Democratic Primary Tightens as James Talarico Gains Ground on Jasmine Crockett

A Democratic primary race for U.S. Senate in Texas that once looked like a comfortable…

3 days ago