
WASHINGTON — Speaker Mike Johnson said the House will vote next week to repeal a provision slipped into the bill to end the shutdown that would allow senators to sue the government for potentially millions of dollars if their data is obtained without their notification. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading.
Main Idea: Speaker Mike Johnson says the House will vote to repeal a shutdown bill provision that could let senators sue the government over access to their phone data.
Key Points:
Taxpayers could face costly lawsuits and payments if senators win under the provision, while the fight over the shutdown bill adds more political turmoil.
Repealing the provision could limit taxpayer exposure and make it harder for lawmakers to add special legal protections in secret.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Central House leader announcing the vote to repeal the provision and explaining his reaction.
His released document and oversight role are central to the backstory of the phone-data access.
Named as the Senate leader involved in inserting the language and later backing repeal.
One of the eight Republican senators directly affected by the phone-data access.
One of the eight Republican senators directly affected by the phone-data access.
Named as the Senate leader who helped insert the language and is central to the dispute.
One of the eight Republican senators directly affected by the phone-data access.
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Sign in to commentOne of the eight Republican senators directly affected and outspoken about the provision.
One of the eight Republican senators directly affected by the phone-data access.
One of the eight Republican senators directly affected by the phone-data access.
One of the eight Republican senators directly affected by the phone-data access.