With key provisions of the surveillance law needing reauthorization before June 1, registered voters are far from reaching a consensus on what Congress should do.
When asked their thoughts on the 14-year-old law, 35 percent of voters surveyed said they would support dismantling it, with an equal amount opposing a repeal.
Moreover, they’re split along party lines: Republicans are more likely than voters overall to oppose a repeal, while Democrats and Tea Party supporters – an unlikely combination – are more likely to support a repeal.
In practice, a wholesale revocation of the Patriot Act is a long shot in Congress. Often pegged as the cornerstone of U.S. anti-terror efforts, the program is seen as crucial to intelligence-gathering, and an attempted repeal is likely to meet with staunch opposition from national security hawks.
In the House, a bill introduced last month by Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.), H.R. 1466, would repeal the entire Patriot Act. Among the measure’s five cosponsors is Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, a conservative Republican.
“A large majority of folks feel there’s an overreach,” Pocan said in an interview last month.
He pointed to a study published by the Pew Research Center in March that found 25 percent of those who are aware of government surveillance programs changed their internet use patterns after former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden revealed the specifics of domestic spying programs in 2013.
Twenty-eight percent of Republicans support undoing the law, compared with 42 percent of Democrats, according to the Morning Consult poll.
But those who said they support the Tea Party, a libertarian-leaning movement typically aligned with Republican politicians, were just as likely as Democrats to favor nixing the Patriot Act, at 42 percent.
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