Sen Feinstein doesn’t like the CIA spying on her committee. But she’s fine with NSA bulk data collection.

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Senate Intelligence Committee chair Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) made waves when she publicly accused the Central Intelligence Agency of spying on Senate computers in an alleged attempt to thwart her committee's investigation into Bush era interrogation and detention practices.

The senator even suggested that the agency had violated the Constitution and federal law. But while Sen Feinstein is up in arms about the intelligence agency's search of her staff's computer system and network, she has been an avid defender of National Security Agency surveillance programs.

"It’s called protecting America," she said shortly after the news broke that the NSA was collecting domestic phone records in bulk. In a Wall Street Journal opinion piece, Sen Feinstein further suggested that the 9/11 terrorist attack likely would have been prevented if the phone metadata program was in place. And when it came to reform, many privacy advocates and journalists have suggested that her proposal for changes to the spy agency's programs amounted to codifying certain powers and expanding others.


Sen Feinstein doesn’t like the CIA spying on her committee. But she’s fine with NSA bulk data collection.