The defeated measure, drafted by the outgoing chairman of the
Judiciary Committee, Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont, would
have placed very slight restrictions on the NSA program that collects
metadata on virtually ever phone call placed in or through US
telecommunications companies or the Internet.
The bill had the support of the Obama administration, demonstrating
that the military-intelligence apparatus, which dictates policy on such
issues, was quite content with the toothless legislation from Leahy. The
main purpose of the bill was to give the impression that Obama and the
Democrats are responding to the widespread public outrage over
government spying sparked by last year’s revelations by former NSA
contractor Edward Snowden, while actually doing nothing to restrict
snooping by the intelligence agency.
The bill was also endorsed by a coalition of technology companies,
including Apple, Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Twitter, AOL and Yahoo,
which feared that Snowden’s revelations had exposed them as de facto arms of the US spy apparatus, harming their ability to sell their products and services, especially in foreign markets.
-- Patrick Martin, "Senate blocks any limit to NSA spying on phone calls" (WSWS).