National Security
Senate RACES Against Clock As Trump’s Intel Chief Waits and Spy Powers Expire
Liberty Check
- Senate accelerates confirmation hearings for Trump’s intelligence pick while critical surveillance authorities remain frozen
- FISA Section 702 warrantless search powers lapsed, leaving America’s intelligence apparatus in unprecedented limbo
- Constitutional conservatives demanding reforms before renewal, blocking Deep State’s attempt to rubber-stamp unchecked spying
The Senate is moving at breakneck speed to confirm President Trump’s Director of National Intelligence nominee while controversial warrantless surveillance powers sit in limbo. The unprecedented pace reflects the urgency of restoring leadership to America’s intelligence community.
FISA Section 702, which allows intelligence agencies to conduct warrantless searches of Americans’ communications, expired as constitutional conservatives demanded meaningful reforms. For years, federal agencies have abused these powers to spy on American citizens without proper oversight.
🚨🚨 Thune’s response when I asked if he thinks Jay Clayton is a good DNI pick:
“I think he’s a really good pick. He’s obviously very capable and competent and [has] a great record. So, my assumption is, and I would certainly hope that Democrats who are being objective about it…
— Nicole Silverio (@NicoleMSilverio) June 11, 2026
Trump’s DNI pick faces a Senate eager to restore order to an intelligence apparatus that spent years targeting conservatives and undermining the America First agenda. The nomination represents a chance to clean house and install leadership that respects both national security needs and constitutional limits.
The expiration of Section 702 has Deep State operatives in full panic mode. They’ve grown accustomed to unchecked surveillance powers and resist any attempt to impose accountability or transparency.
Patriots in Congress are refusing to simply renew these authorities without significant safeguards against abuse. The intelligence community’s track record of targeting Americans — including Trump campaign associates — proves that trust must be earned, not automatically granted.
Senate leadership recognizes that restoring competent, America-first leadership to the DNI position is critical for both national security and protecting civil liberties. The accelerated confirmation timeline signals bipartisan recognition that the intelligence community cannot remain leaderless.
However, the surveillance power debate exposes a fundamental divide. Establishment figures want business as usual — unlimited spying with minimal oversight. Constitutional conservatives demand reforms that prevent the kind of political weaponization Americans witnessed during the Russia collusion hoax.
The intelligence community’s credibility remains in tatters after years of partisan witch hunts and leaks designed to undermine elected leadership. Rebuilding trust requires more than just new leadership — it demands structural reforms that prevent future abuses.
As the Senate races to confirm Trump’s DNI nominee, the surveillance authority standoff continues. Patriots refuse to hand blank checks to agencies that have repeatedly violated Americans’ Fourth Amendment rights in the name of national security.
The Constitution must be defended.