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Antisurveillance Campaign Adds Itself to Washington’s Datebook


The antisurveillance crowd is trying to get onto the government’s radar. And though it’s a busy Tuesday in the nation’s capital, they seem to be having some success, repurposing an effective 2012 campaign to stop two Internet-related laws. But this time, instead of trying to block measures, a coalition of civil liberties groups and technology companies is flooding social media with calls to pass legislation that would limit the surveillance powers of the National Security Agency.

Presented as “The Day We Fight Back,” a broad coalition of groups including the American Civil Liberties Union and the Electronic Frontier Foundation and companies like Reddit and Tumblr called on Internet users to press lawmakers into action. The campaign compared itself to earlier efforts to block laws like the Stop Online Piracy Act and the Protect IP Act. But as a sign of the movement’s attempt at maturing from opposing laws to backing them, it encouraged participants to support the U.S.A. Freedom Act. The bill, co-sponsored by Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont and Representative Jim Sensenbrenner of Wisconsin, tries to place statutory limits on the N.S.A.’s surveillance abilities.

By some metrics of social media, the campaign succeeded in capturing a large amount of attention online. Its designated hashtag, #StopTheNSA, was trending during parts of the day among users of Twitter in the United States, with the website Topsy recording a large spike in use of the term in the past two days. On Facebook, the National Security Agency was at the top of the social network’s new “Trending” module for much of Tuesday for some users. The campaign’s website reported that more than 37,000 phone calls had been made and that more than 85,000 emails had been sent in support of its calls to action.

The campaign’s message was getting through to some members of Congress, who took to Twitter to confirm that they were hearing from constituents:

One representative, Mike Honda of California, changed his Twitter avatar to show his support for the campaign:

And other members of Congress also highlighted their support for the U.S.A. Freedom Act:

While the “Day We Fight Back” campaign gained considerable attention on the Internet and from some corners of Congress on a day when major distractions abounded, the prospects for the bill it supports remained uncertain. The U.S.A. Freedom Act, which the campaign is backing, is still being considered by the Senate Judiciary Committee. The FISA Improvements Act, which the campaign opposes, has been reported out of the Senate Intelligence Committee.



With Christie Under Fire, Republican Governors Have Big Fund-Raising Month

The Republican Governors Association announced on Wednesday that it had set a January record for fund-raising, seeking to refute suggestions that the troubles of Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey have scared away the group’s donors.

The announcement landed as Mr. Christie, the group’s chairman, arrived in Chicago on Tuesday for a public speech and a fund-raising dinner at the home of Kenneth C. Griffin, a top donor to the group. Democrats have tried to paint Mr. Christie as a liability to his party, pointing out that some Republican candidates have declined to appear with him on his recent fund-raising trips to Florida and Texas.

But if some donors are beginning to have doubts about backing the organization because of the New Jersey bridge scandal that has dogged Mr. Christie, it is not reflected in fund-raising last month. A spokesman for the group said it had raised $6 million â€" twice as much as the association has ever raised in January, including during the 2010 cycle, its best ever.

The announcement is unusual for the association, which is not required to report monthly fund-raising totals, underscoring the urgency with which the group has responded to questions about Mr. Christie. Even some Republicans have suggested that Mr. Christie step down and focus on New Jersey and his response to federal and state inquiries into political retaliation by his former aides and his administration’s handling of relief money for Hurricane Sandy.

In 2013, before the bridge scandal exploded, the Republican association raised $50 million, far more than the Democratic Governors Association.

“Donors are active because Republican governors are the leaders producing real results for their states,” said Gail Gitcho, a spokeswoman for the governors association, “implementing policies to create jobs, balancing budgets without raising taxes, improving education, and making their states more attractive to business.”