### Republicans Can’t Get Their Act Together on Spy Law
Well, here we go again. Republican leaders in the House are caught in yet another chaotic mess over a spy law that’s stirring up more drama than a reality TV show. They’re racing against the clock to extend Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), but spoiler alert: they’ve got no solid plan after months of floundering.
You’d think with all the time they’ve had, they’d have come up with something. But nope! Trump, the GOP brass, and the White House are still trying to figure it out, and guess what? No agreement in sight. Some House Republicans are crossing their fingers for a multi-year extension with a few tweaks to keep the privacy advocates at bay, while others are already bracing for another showdown when the current short-term extension runs out.
Who could have predicted this? Oh right, anyone paying attention. Trump’s insistence on a “clean” extension clashed with the skepticism brewing inside his own party, and here we are. Rep. Andy Ogles from Tennessee called it a “trainwreck” — and he’s not wrong. Speaker Mike Johnson’s attempts to hammer out a long-term deal went up in smoke after days of negotiations that led nowhere.
And now, Senate Republicans are stepping in, ready to take control if the House can’t pull it together. Senate Majority Leader John Thune is already preparing for the worst, saying they need “optionality” because who knows what the House will do next? Meanwhile, Trump’s given Congress a deadline of June 1 to get their act together and reopen the Department of Homeland Security. No pressure, right?
Johnson keeps saying they were “very close” to a deal, but with 20 Republicans voting down his latest proposal, it’s hard to see how that’s true. The emergency 10-day extension might buy them some time, but it’s like putting a Band-Aid on a broken leg.
Then there’s the added bonus of hard-liners pushing for more restrictions on surveillance of Americans, while Trump digs in his heels for a straightforward reauthorization. When House GOP members revolted over provisions they didn’t like, it became clear that the party is in disarray, with some even calling for a ban on central bank digital currency to be part of the deal.
Good luck with that, because the White House isn’t on board, and Senate Republicans are warning that those demands could scare off the Democrats they need to pass anything. Morale among House Republicans is plummeting, too. Moderates are growing impatient, with one calling the situation “ridiculous” and noting that the speaker didn’t have much of a plan to begin with.
So, what’s the takeaway here? While some Democrats are rallying for a clean extension, the whole thing looks like a circus. Rep. Jim Himes, a Democrat, is trying to play mediator, but he’s discovered that Republicans can’t even talk to each other, let alone reach across the aisle.
In the end, what’s really going on here? Just another day in the life of a political party that can’t seem to get out of its own way. How many more “emergency” extensions do we need before someone actually takes charge?
By Admin | Published: April 20, 2026 at 5:21 am
