Bills/S. 3893

A bill to amend the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 to reauthorize and reform certain authorities and to provide greater transparency and oversight.

A bill to amend the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 to reauthorize and reform certain authorities and to provide greater transparency and oversight.

In CommitteeOtherSenateSenate Bill · 119th Congress
Bill Progress · Senate
Introduced
Committee
Passed House
Passed Senate
Passed Both
Signed

Plain Language Summary

# Plain Language Summary: S 3893 **What the Bill Would Do** This bill would update and extend the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), a law that governs how U.S. intelligence agencies conduct surveillance for national security purposes. The bill aims to reauthorize certain surveillance authorities that are set to expire while also adding new reforms to increase transparency and congressional oversight of these intelligence activities. **Who It Affects and Key Provisions** The bill would impact intelligence agencies (like the FBI and NSA), Congress, and ultimately American citizens whose communications might be monitored. While specific provisions aren't detailed in the summary provided, the stated goals of "reform" and "greater transparency and oversight" suggest the bill would likely include measures to limit certain surveillance powers, require more public reporting about how these powers are used, or increase congressional review of surveillance programs.

Exactly which surveillance authorities would be reauthorized and what specific reforms would be included aren't clear from this summary. **Current Status** As of now, S 3893 is in committee, meaning it hasn't yet been debated or voted on by the full Senate. It was introduced by Senator Mike Lee (R-UT). For more detailed information about specific provisions, you would need to review the full bill text, as this summary doesn't specify which FISA authorities are being reauthorized or what reforms are proposed.

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Latest Action

February 23, 2026

Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.

Sponsor

R
Lee, Mike [R-UT]
R-UT · Senate
5 cosponsors

Key Dates

Introduced
February 23, 2026
Last Updated
February 23, 2026
Read Full Text on Congress.gov →
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