Press ReleaseNeutral2026-06-05
In Case You Missed It… Sen. Rick Scott Demands FISA Reforms to Protect Americans from Illegal Government Surveillance
Rick Scott
RFL · Senator
ImmigrationForeign PolicyInfrastructure
Context
This press release from Senator Rick Scott (R-FL) was published on 2026-06-05 and titled "In Case You Missed It… Sen. Rick Scott Demands FISA Reforms to Protect Americans from Illegal Government Surveillance".
Full Text
In Case You Missed It… Sen. Rick Scott Demands FISA Reforms to Protect Americans from Illegal Government Surveillance WASHINGTON, D.C. - Senator Rick Scott released a statement this morning after he voted against an extension of FISA that did not include reforms and fell short of protecting Americans' Fourth Amendment rights. Senator Rick Scott said, "I've said it before and I'll say it again: any extension of FISA needs significant reforms to protect Americans. I've been surveilled by the government multiple times, along with so many other Americans. We can't give the swamp unchecked power to spy on law-abiding Americans. Warrants MUST be required to protect our constitutional liberties and uphold the Fourth Amendment. I voted against an extension because I want real REFORM and ACCOUNTABILITY, not the status quo." The vote followed an 18-hour debate on a $70 billion immigration enforcement funding package after Democrats denied ICE and Border Patrol funding for more than 100 days. Earlier this week, Senator Scott was joined by U.S. Reps. Andy Harris and Kieth Self in an op-ed published in Fox News titled, " Fix FISA. Don't Spy on Us. " Read the op-ed HERE or below. Fox News Sen. Rick Scott, Andy Harris, Rep. Keith Self: Fix FISA. Don't Spy on Us June 4, 2026 America's founding generation did not take up arms merely over unreasonable taxation. They understood ceding their rights to the government for promise of security was a bad deal. They believed risking death to live free was better than subsisting under tyranny. They fought back against unchecked tyranny across an ocean. The crown planted spies in their taverns, rifled through their papers without cause and intercepted their private correspondence. Today, unchecked deep-state bureaucrats are treating themselves as kings, putting their interests ahead of American liberty. The "Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act" (FISA) has decomposed into a modern incarnation of the general warrants and writs of assistance that ignited our American Revolution. Created as a tool to track foreign threats, FISA has evolved into a domestic surveillance machine: sweeping up Americans' communications, hiding behind secret courts and treating the Fourth Amendment like a roadblock instead of the supreme law of the land. The rattlesnake on the Gadsden flag is issuing a new warning: Don't Spy on Me. On June 12, our colleagues in Congress will face another deadline to renew a key FISA authority, Section 702. The intelligence community wants a "clean" reauthorization without changes to its unconstitutional infrastructure. However, the American people expect us to reassert American liberty. That is why some members of the House Freedom Caucus and the Senate Steering Committee have made it clear that meaningful reforms are the only pathway to a long-term extension here. This position is not opposed to national security. It is a refusal to sacrifice American liberty on the altar of unchecked power. We can start by addressing the expansion of the term "electronic communication service provider." Two years ago, the government broadened its surveillance fishing tool to include everyday Americans. Intelligence officials wanted access to one specific company. Instead, they rammed through sweeping language that now lets the National Security Agency (NSA) compel any U.S. business or organization with a computer, router or server to hand over communications. That includes your local hardware store, community center, and, yes, your neighborhood church. This is not an incidental collection. It is an expansion of the government's reach, increasing the volume of Americans' communications available for capture and the potential for abuse. Former Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Mark Warner - a Democrat - acknowledged the domestic surveillance infrastructure on the Senate floor and promised a fix, but Congress has yet to deliver. This must be corrected. Next, we should unshroud the secrecy that enables current problems with FISA. Federal prosecutors routinely impose indefinite nondisclosure orders on telecom companies to prevent the public from seeing how extensive their domestic espionage operation is. The "NDO Fairness Act" would add judicial review and time limits on these gag orders. Americans deserve to know when their data is being sought, especially outside national security cases. The American people also expect us to crack down on federal agencies evading constitutional protections by buying Americans' data from commercial brokers . This includes geolocation data, communications metadata and browsing history. If government officials need to know, they can ask a judge to issue a warrant. Just because it's become normalized, doesn't make it normal. We can and must close this loophole. The intelligence community wants a "clean" reauthorization without changes to its unconstitutional infrastructure. However, the American people expect us to reassert American liberty. Still, the most alarming problem is the millions of "backdoor" queries of Americans' communications conducted without warrants. At the