Ƶ

News | Advocacy

United States: Reauthorization of Section 702 must include reforms protecting journalists

Reauthorization of controversial surveillance program without reforms would imperil press freedom in the U.S.

US President Donald Trump, with Vice President JD Vance and Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, delivers his State of the Union address before a joint session of Congress in the House of Representatives chamber of the US Capitol in Washington, DC, USA in Washington, DC, USA, 24 February 2026. EPA/WILL OLIVER

As Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) is set to expire in the coming week, the International Press Institute (IPI) urges Congress to oppose reauthorization of the statute until necessary reforms that would protect journalists’ privacy and communications can be made.

, which was added as an amendment to FISA in 2008, empowers the U.S. intelligence community to surveil and monitor foreign nationals reasonably believed to be located abroad with the purpose of gathering intelligence information. 

Though the statute explicitly prohibits the direct surveillance of U.S. persons, who are protected from unreasonable searches and seizures under the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, Section 702 surveillance probes do incidentally sweep up the communications of U.S. persons that have had contact with surveillance targets. 

These communications from U.S. persons to surveillance targets, which can include calls, emails and texts between American or U.S.-based journalists and overseas sources, can then be stored, queried, and reviewed by American intelligence agencies without a court-ordered warrant. 

Section 702 is next set to expire on April 20. President Donald Trump has a “clean” 18-month reauthorization that does not make additional changes to the statute. He had previously to the surveillance program under the Biden administration. Last month, bipartisan concerns over a “clean” reauthorization of Section 702 on renewal of the statute. 

Section 702 was last reauthorized in , following months of debate and bipartisan concern over privacy. Several reforms were included during the last reauthorization cycle, including a requirement that intelligence agents get before querying the Section 702 database for information that could involve U.S. persons. However, an amendment that would have required a warrant for searches and reviews of Section 702 surveillance data involving Americans was narrowly rejected. 

Misuse and abuse of Section 702 to surveil and target Americans – including journalists – are . In March 2026, a FISA court judge that the filtering process intelligence agents use to review the messages of Americans does not comply with rules for queries of Americans’ information, and must be reengineered. 

By the government’s , the digital communications of U.S.-based journalists swept up by the Section 702 intelligence gathering process have been improperly queried by intelligence agents in warrantless, “backdoor” searches, threatening the privacy of journalists and compromising reporter-source confidentiality.  

As IPI has documented, concerns about leaks have made sources inside and outside the U.S. less inclined to speak to American journalists, particularly on matters related to national security. Critics have also pointed to a lack of independent oversight over Section 702 authority and by the Trump administration to the surveillance program’s oversight mechanisms during his second term.

This impending reauthorization round also comes as the Trump administration expands domestic use of a that has been used against to target “foreign terrorist organizations” and has demonstrated an unprecedented willingness to use legal mechanisms to force journalists to reveal confidential sources of reporting on administration policies. 

In January, the FBI and seized the reporting equipment of Washington Post reporter Hannah Natanson as part of an investigation into a government contractor. In February, a federal judge that the Department of Justice could not search Natanson’s devices, due to concerns that allowing the government to review her large trove of confidential government sources “leaving the government’s fox in charge of the Washington Post’s henhouse.”

During an April press conference following the downing of an American fighter jet in Iran, Trump to jail journalists who reported on details of the rescue operation if they did not reveal the source of their reporting. It remains unclear which reporters and outlet he was referring to. Trump has used the war against Iran as for a “clean” reauthorization of Section 702.

We strongly urge Congress to oppose reauthorization of Section 702 unless key provisions protecting privacy of communications are introduced,” said John Daniszewski, chair of the North American Committee of IPI. “Voting to reauthorize Section 702 under the current administration would essentially hand the president a new tool with which to go after members of the press for any reporting the administration does not like.” 

“Without sufficient oversight and privacy guardrails that protect the rights of journalists, reauthorization of Section 702 will undoubtedly increase the chilling effect this administration has already created for the press. This could mean important stories would go unpublished, which would ultimately deprive the public of critical news and information. IPI urges Congress to implement reforms of Section 702 that prevent governmental overreach and protect the civil liberties of all Americans.”  

Join the fight for press freedom

Become an IPI member. For over 75 years, the IPI global network has brought together journalists from around the world who share a commitment to media freedom. Learn how you can join our community of solidarity and professional exchange, all while supporting IPI’s mission.

Become a member

Support our work. IPI is at the forefront of the fight to protect media freedom. By donating to our work, you help ensure journalists can do their jobs freely and safeguard everyone’s right to information.

Support IPI

Latest