2026年6月10日 美国东部时间下午1:48 / 福克斯新闻
参议员马克·沃纳称比尔·普尔特尔的任命是向这项关键情报项目延期“扔出了一枚活手雷”
作者:亚历克斯·米勒 福克斯新闻
FISA摊牌:国会延长《外国情报监控法》的努力存疑
福克斯新闻首席国会通讯员查德·珀格伦在《特别报道》节目中报道了国会就延长《外国情报监控法》第702条款展开的持续摊牌。
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在总统唐纳德·特朗普向民主党做出关键让步后,美国这项饱受争议的间谍权力延期计划可能再次迎来转机。
国会原本即将完成《外国情报监控法》(FISA)的延期工作,该法案将于本周五到期,但特朗普任命现任联邦住房金融局局长比尔·普尔特尔担任美国情报机构临时负责人后,这一进程戛然而止。
普尔特尔将于6月19日接任国家情报总监办公室(ODNI)主任一职,他已成为这场因《外国情报监控法》第702条款争议早已陷入僵局的程序中的主要阻碍。批评人士抨击他毫无履职所需的经验,而该职位需要他监管美国18个情报机构。
参议院推动国家间谍权力延期的努力因特朗普引发的争议受阻
唐纳德·特朗普总统2026年6月10日在白宫椭圆形办公室发表讲话。(朱莉娅·德马雷·尼基森/美联社照片)
“这不是参议院民主党和共和党之间的问题,而是本届政府在距离延期关键节点仅剩10天时扔出了一枚活手雷,”弗吉尼亚州民主党参议员马克·沃纳说道。
作为参议院情报委员会最高民主党议员,沃纳与参议院情报委员会主席、阿肯色州共和党参议员汤姆·科顿达成了一项为期三年的延期折中方案,其中包含对第702条款的改革。若不是特朗普任命普尔特尔,该方案本有望推进。
面对这一僵局,特朗普周三宣布他正积极寻求替代人选担任国家情报总监,并要求国会在此期间通过短期延期法案维持该项目运转。
“我想说的是,普尔特尔只会短暂任职,我们会选出其他人选,”特朗普在椭圆形办公室对记者表示,“我们正在面试五名不同的人选,他们都非常优秀、背景各异,我们会任命合适的人担任该职位。”
为何特朗普选择比尔·普尔特尔领导美国情报机构?此前批评者质疑其资质
https://www.foxnews.com/video/6393320613112
共和党高层称FISA至关重要,但其延期工作在国会陷入停滞
这一举措可能有助于部分参议院民主党人打消顾虑。
弗吉尼亚州民主党参议员蒂姆·凯恩表示,他认为只要得知普尔特尔将会离任,就足以说服一些民主党人支持延期。
“我认为,如果人们对国家情报总监人选有信心,那将让FISA相关问题变得容易很多,”凯恩说道。
但对其他议员而言,特朗普关于普尔特尔任期时长的含糊表态仍然令人担忧。
“这是个问题,”缅因州无党派参议员安格斯·金说道,“如果普尔特尔将无限期留任,那我无法投票支持延期。如果有明确、可衡量的任期期限,我会考虑支持。”
议员们目前正在考虑将该项目延期三周,这一方案让保守派和民主党人都颇为头疼。
特朗普在永久负责人到任前着手精简情报办公室
参议院多数党领袖约翰·图恩(南达科他州共和党)2026年6月2日在美国国会山参议院共和党新闻发布会上发言,身旁是俄克拉荷马州共和党参议员詹姆斯·兰克福德和西弗吉尼亚州共和党参议员谢莉·摩尔·卡皮托。(比尔·克拉克/CQ-罗尔呼叫公司)
这是国会山上罕见的跨党派共识议题:两党隐私强硬派都希望推行大幅改革,尤其是针对防止美国人在第702条款下为监控外国人而收集的信息中被牵连的搜查令要求。
这一现实意味着,无论如何,部分共和党人和民主党人都不会支持折中方案——上周有六名共和党议员与几乎所有民主党议员一道阻挠了一项推进该项目延期的程序性投票。
“我们为什么不能只监控外国人,而不监控美国人?这是个全新的理念,”佛罗里达州共和党参议员里克·斯科特说道。
这意味着参议院多数党领袖、南达科他州共和党议员约翰·图恩需要尽可能争取民主党议员的支持。
“我们需要民主党议员的选票,”图恩说道,“而且正如我之前所说,我认为无论您对比尔·普尔特尔有何看法,纳入第702条款延期方案的改革都是一种保障,无论谁担任该职位,也无论哪个政党执政。”
但其他人则认为,本周五的截止日期并非该项目的终点。
参议院少数党党鞭、伊利诺伊州民主党参议员迪克·德宾在参议院发言时表示,所谓“必须在本周末前将延期法案提交全院投票”的说法“并不属实”。
“现有法律允许,即便没有国会延期,FISA法院的命令也可让第702条款的情报收集工作继续维持一年,”德宾说道,“国会能够也必须花时间妥善处理此事。”
亚历克斯·米勒是福克斯新闻数字频道负责报道美国参议院的撰稿人。
Trump concession breathes new life into stalled FISA spy powers deal
June 10, 2026 1:48pm EDT / Fox News
Sen Mark Warner called the Bill Pulte appointment a ‘live hand grenade’ thrown into the critical intelligence program renewal
By Alex Miller Fox News
FISA showdown: Congressional effort to extend Foreign Surveillance Act uncertain
Fox News chief congressional correspondent Chad Pergram reports on the ongoing FISA showdown as Congress moves to extend Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act on ‘Special Report.’
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The flatlined bid to reauthorize the nation’s controversial spying powers may have a pulse again after President Donald Trump made a key concession to Democrats.
Congress was on its way to reauthorizing the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which is set to expire Friday, but that momentum was halted when Trump tapped his current director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, Bill Pulte, to serve as a temporary chief for the nation’s spy agencies.
Pulte, who is set to take over the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) on June 19, has proven the prime sticking point in a process that has already been marred by disagreements over FISA’s controversial Section 702. Critics have panned him as having no experience in a role that will require him to oversee the nation’s 18 intelligence agencies.
SENATE PUSH TO REAUTHORIZE NATION’S SPY POWERS STUMBLES OVER CONTROVERSIAL TRUMP DECISION
President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on June 10, 2026.(Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP Photo)
“This is not a problem between Senate Democrats and Senate Republicans, this was the administration throwing a live hand grenade into a critical reauthorization 10 days out,” Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., said.
Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, and Senate Intelligence Committee chair Tom Cotton, R-Ark., produced a compromise, three-year reauthorization with reforms to Section 702 that likely would have advanced absent Trump’s decision to tap Pulte.
Given the logjam, Trump on Wednesday announced that he was actively seeking a replacement to lead ODNI and requested that Congress produce a short-term extension to keep the program running in the meantime.
“I would say this, Pulte is going to be there for a short while, while we pick somebody else,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. “We’re interviewing five different people. They’re all very good, very different, and we’ll put somebody there.”
WHY TRUMP PICKED BILL PULTE TO LEAD US INTELLIGENCE AS CRITICS QUESTION HIS QUALIFICATIONS
https://www.foxnews.com/video/6393320613112
Top GOP leaders say FISA is essential as extension stalls in Congress
That move could help some Senate Democrats get over the hump.
Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., said that he believed that at least knowing that Pulte would be out could be enough to dislodge some Democrats to support an extension.
“I think knowing who the DNI will be, if it’s somebody that people have confidence in, that makes the FISA question a lot easier,” Kaine said.
For others, Trump’s ambiguity on how long Pulte will stick around remains a troubling prospect.
“That’s a problem,” Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, said. “If Mr. Pulte is gonna be there for an indefinite period, then I can’t vote for an extension. If there’s some timeline, measurable, defined, then I would consider it.”
Lawmakers are currently mulling a possible three-week extension to the program, which has given conservatives and Democrats heartburn.
TRUMP MOVES TO SLASH INTELLIGENCE OFFICE AHEAD OF PERMANENT CHIEF’S ARRIVAL
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., speaks during a Senate Republicans press conference at the U.S. Capitol on June 2, 2026, flanked by Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., and Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W. Va.(Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc.)
It’s one of the rare horseshoe issues in the Capitol where privacy hawks on both sides of the aisle want steep reforms, particularly for warrant requirements to prevent Americans from getting ensnared in information collected on foreigners under Section 702.
That reality means that some Republicans and Democrats wouldn’t vote for the compromise deal anyway — six Republicans joined nearly every Democrat to block a procedural move to reauthorize the program last week.
“Why don’t we surveil the foreigners and not surveil Americans? It’s a new concept,” Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., said.
That means that Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., will need all the help from Democrats that he can get.
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“We need Democrat votes,” Thune said. “And, as I’ve said before, I think irrespective of what you think about Bill Pulte, providing the reforms that are included in the 702 reauthorization is a safeguard, regardless of who’s in that job, or which party is in power here.”
But others contend that the Friday deadline isn’t the hard end of the program.
Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill., said on the Senate floor that the case to rush a reauthorization to the floor by the end of the week “is not true.”
“Existing law allows Section 702 collection to continue under an order from the FISA court for another year, even without congressional reauthorization,” Durbin said. “Congress can and must take the time to get this right.”
Alex Miller is a writer for Fox News Digital covering the U.S. Senate.
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