logo
#

Latest news with #apparatuses

GOP privacy hawks wage quiet battle with TSA over face recognition bill
GOP privacy hawks wage quiet battle with TSA over face recognition bill

Politico

time03-08-2025

  • Business
  • Politico

GOP privacy hawks wage quiet battle with TSA over face recognition bill

Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), the bill's champion, in an interview compared the TSA's increasing use of facial recognition capabilities to similar apparatuses used by authoritarian countries like China and Hungary to conduct massive citizen surveillance. 'It's been used to intimidate, to track and to intimidate freedom of expression and freedom of assembly,' Merkley said. Merkley tried to shoehorn the legislation into last year's reauthorization of Federal Aviation Administration programs. But associations representing airlines, airport employees and other travel-related businesses fiercely opposed it, arguing it would allow bad actors to opt for manual ID checks and significantly increase wait times at airport security checkpoints. Industry backlash against the proposal is well enough known that it might have been the reason lobbyists weren't given an advance heads-up about the Commerce committee's plans to mark up the measure, Ryan Propis, vice president of security and facilitation at the U.S. Travel Association, intimated. 'The discussion at the time was that there's going to be more transparency, more hearings … around the use of biometrics,' said Propis in an interview about assurances the industry received at the time of Merkley's efforts to get the bill included in the FAA reauthorization. 'And unfortunately none of that has happened.' But lawmakers who have been trying to push the bill forward are saying that TSA was the real driving force behind the legislation's withdrawal, with the agency using industry lobbyists as conduits to relay dissatisfaction and mar the measure's chances. When asked Thursday whether he believed TSA itself was raising concerns about the bill, Cruz replied, 'undoubtedly.' The burgeoning industry tasked with supplying technologies that use sophisticated biometric data for identity verification, and which are increasingly powered by AI algorithms, have also arrived on the scene to tank the bill. Two of the sector's top associations, the Security Industry Association and the International Biometrics and Identity Association, sent a letter on the eve of the scheduled markup to Cruz and the top Commerce Committee Democrat, Sen. Maria Cantwell of Washington. In the missive, they contended that the bill was 'completely out of line with the Trump Administration's stated priorities for federal agencies to increasingly incorporate advanced technologies and limit unnecessary personnel costs.' Since the start of Trump's second term, the administration has been pushing for federal agencies to slash budgets and reduce personnel, touting technological advances like artificial intelligence as a cheaper, more efficient backfill. Testifying before House appropriators in May on the Trump administration's proposed $247 million cut to the TSA budget, McNeill also noted that her agency has been deploying state-of-the-art screening technology to airports around the globe, adding that 'a commitment to continually embracing new and emerging technology is urgently needed.' Following the postponement of the bill's consideration in committee, Cruz and other members of the panel said they were confident differences could be resolved in time to bring it up at a subsequent business meeting — and gave no indication they were planning to stand down despite administration opposition. 'I think the bill will get marked up,' said Cruz, 'and it's going to pass.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store