Rep. Andy Biggs just handed the deep state its worst nightmare: a brilliantly crafted piece of legislation that protects American liberty while maintaining genuine national security capabilities. The Arizona conservative’s “Protect Liberty and End Warrantless Surveillance Act” represents everything the swamp fears most—principled governance that puts the Constitution first and bureaucratic convenience dead last.
This isn’t your typical Washington theater. Biggs has delivered a surgical strike against the surveillance apparatus that has grown fat and lazy spying on law-abiding Americans while actual threats slip through the cracks. The legislation explicitly bars warrantless queries of American communications while preserving Section 702’s legitimate foreign intelligence functions—proving once again that defending constitutional rights makes America stronger, not weaker.
The timing couldn’t be more perfect. After years of watching intelligence agencies treat the Fourth Amendment like a suggestion rather than the supreme law of the land, patriots finally have a champion willing to restore constitutional order. Biggs understands what the founders knew instinctively: a government that spies on its own citizens without warrants isn’t protecting democracy—it’s destroying it.
Perhaps most ingeniously, the bill incorporates “The Fourth Amendment Is Not For Sale Act,” slamming shut the backdoor that allows intelligence agencies to purchase American data from third-party brokers. This provision exposes the cozy relationship between Big Tech data merchants and government surveillance operations—a partnership that would make East German Stasi officers blush with envy.
The legislation’s demand for FISA Court transparency within 90 days represents another masterstroke. For too long, this shadowy judicial body has operated in complete darkness, rubber-stamping surveillance requests with the enthusiasm of a DMV clerk processing renewals. Biggs is dragging this process into the sunlight where it belongs, creating accountability mechanisms that bureaucrats have spent decades avoiding.
What makes this legislation particularly brilliant is its broad coalition appeal. When the ACLU and Americans for Prosperity find themselves on the same side, you know something fundamental about American liberty is at stake. This isn’t partisan politics—it’s constitutional restoration that transcends traditional political boundaries because freedom matters to everyone who calls America home.
The two-year reauthorization timeline until April 2028 demonstrates strategic thinking that Washington desperately needs more of. Rather than the typical decade-long blank checks that allow programs to metastasize beyond recognition, Biggs has built in regular congressional review—exactly the kind of constitutional check that keeps government power within proper bounds.
Critics will inevitably shriek about “national security” and “terrorist threats,” but their arguments ring hollow after years of surveillance overreach that failed to prevent major security breaches while successfully intimidating American citizens. Real national security flows from constitutional legitimacy, not from treating every American like a potential enemy of the state.
This legislation also exposes the fundamental weakness of the globalist approach to governance: the belief that liberty and security exist in zero-sum competition. Biggs proves the Reagan doctrine that constitutional government enhances both simultaneously. When intelligence agencies operate within proper legal boundaries, they earn public trust that makes their legitimate missions more effective, not less.
The question now becomes whether the incoming administration will embrace this constitutional framework or cave to deep state pressure for a “clean extension” that preserves bureaucratic prerogatives over citizen rights. This decision will reveal whether America’s intelligence apparatus truly serves the Constitution or considers itself above the law.
Patriots should watch this legislation carefully. It represents far more than surveillance reform—it’s a test case for whether constitutional government can be restored in an age of administrative state overreach. Biggs has provided the roadmap. Now it’s time to see who has the courage to follow it toward a more perfect union that actually honors the Bill of Rights.