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Trump’s loyalist intelligence chief pick throws into doubt renewal of critical surveillance program
Bill Pulte at the White House in Washington DC on 2 September 2025. Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/AP View image in fullscreen Bill Pulte at the White House in Washington DC on 2 September 2025. Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/AP Trump’s loyalist intelligence chief pick throws into doubt renewal of critical surveillance program Democrats say appointment of Bill Pulte could doom bipartisan agreement to renew section 702 of Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act Sign up for the Breaking News US newsletter email Donald Trump’s appointment of a close political ally with no intelligence experience to lead the nation’s spy agencies has thrown last-ditch efforts to renew a critical surveillance program into doubt. Bill Pulte, currently head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), major Republican donor and heir to a home construction fortune, was tapped by Trump to serve as acting director of national intelligence days after Tulsi Gabbard departed the role. ‘Americans will be less safe’: alarm as Trump picks loyalist as intelligence chief Read more Senior Democrats immediately said the move could doom a fragile bipartisan agreement to renew section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which is due to expire next week. Section 702 permits US intelligence agencies to collect communications of foreign targets operating outside the country without a warrant. Congress is working toward a deadline of 12 June. The powerful intelligence tool has long attracted controversy, since the program targets foreign nationals whose messages may pass through US servers or involve US contacts, meaning a wide array of domestic communications can be swept up without a warrant ever being sought. The FBI in 2020 was discovered using section 702 to investigate whether protesters involved with Black Lives Matter had any ties to terrorists, according to a declassified memo released by the office of the director of national intelligence in 2023, a seat that would soon be filled by Pulte. Mark Warner, a Democrat and vice-chair of the US Senate intelligence committee, trashed Pulte’s lack of experience for the position. “What qualifications from my standpoint does Mr Pulte bring to the office? Well, he has shown that he is willing to do anything that President Trump wants, legal or otherwise,” he said during a hearing on Tuesday. In an interview with NPR on Wednesday morning, Warner went further, saying that Pulte’s appointment had upended what he described as an already difficult path to renewal of section 702. “I do not have the confidence I had yesterday,” he said, adding that the move amounted to placing “someone with no intelligence background, any record of misusing private information, in charge of Director of National Intelligence” at the worst possible moment. The pressure is also being applied privately. Punchbowl News reported that Warner had personally asked John Thune, the Senate majority leader, to use his influence with the White House to reverse the ap