President Obama’s Surveillance Report Gets Bipartisan Pushback

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Sens Al Franken (D-MN) and Dean Heller (R-NV) are not satisfied with a new report from the Obama Administration on government surveillance programs, and say their Surveillance Transparency Act is still needed.

Their problem is that the report identifies the number of people targeted, not the number from whom information was collected. It also does not identify how many of those who had info collected were American, and how much of that wound up being reviewed by the government.

The pair said the report, issued by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, is only a "small step" toward the surveillance transparency they are looking for.

“I recognize that this report is being offered in good faith," said Sen Franken, who suggested good faith didn't cut it. "[I]t still leaves Americans in the dark," he said. "It doesn’t tell the American people enough about what information is being gathered about them and how it’s being used."

Sen Heller added: “The report released by the Administration represents some progress, but it does not do near enough to provide Americans with adequate information


President Obama’s Surveillance Report Gets Bipartisan Pushback