Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) has prevented an attempt to pass legislation that would have expanded privacy for federal legislators and civil servants to all in the United States.
On Monday night, Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) asked the US Senate for unanimous consent from fellow senators to pass his legislation, S.2850or by protecting Americans from the law on glorification and political violence.
Wyden’s bill, if passed, would have taken bilateral provisions Designed for the protection of government officials, legislators and their families from having their personal information sold or negotiated by data brokers and expanding them to every American and person living in the United States.
“Members of Congress should not take special treatment,” Wyden told the Senate floor. “Our voters deserve protection against violence, pursuit and other criminal threats.”
“Protection of all is the most effective way of protecting US military and personal information, including secret officers,” Wyden added, per Congress’s file.
Cruise was the only one opposed to the senator, who claimed without evidence that the Wyden bill could disrupt law enforcement, “such as the knowledge of sexual predators”.
Data brokers are part of a global industry of many billions of dollars that benefit from the accumulation and sales of access to huge quantities of personal, financial and gradular information information of Americans, often collected from phones and other internet -related devices. These data are sold, including governments, which do not need a warrant for commercially acquired data.
The collection of huge data banks also comes with its own dangers, including security duties and data violations. The information purchased by data brokers has been used in DOX and in recent cases is linked to the receipt of two Minnesota legislators, one of whom died. The murderer allegedly received their home addresses from data brokers.
Cruz is also opposed to a second legislation introduced soon by Wyden, S.2851which would have expanded the protections for federal officials and legislators to government officials and their staff, as well as survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault.
In response, Cruz said that “he is interested in expanding protection to a broad universe as possible, as possible, but this answer has not yet processed.”
Correction: He was informed to show that two Minnesota legislators were shot, one of whom he died.
