Specialists. Review the latest events any time at cspan. Org coronavirus. Now several directors from the National Institutes of health testified before a House Appropriations subcommittee on the president s 2021 budget request and the coronavirus outbreak. The subcommittee will come to order. Good morning, all. Dr. Collins welcome back to the labor hhs education appropriationless subcommittee. Let me also welcome all of you, the five institute and senate directors joining in this morning. Dr. Bianchi, director of the Eunice Kennedy sh rieber National Institute of child health and human development. Thats almost as long as the subcommittee on health, education, Human Services and related agencies here. So anyway. Dr. Anthony fauci director of the National Institute of allergy and infectious deceases. Dr. Gary gibbons director of the National Heart, lung and blood institute. Dr. Ned sharpless. Director of the National Cancer institute. And dr. Dara volkow director of the National Institu
Will come back to the auditorium. Both those president here and watching at home. I am again senior fellow, burried pleased to welcome you to the second panelist of the 2019 Institute Surveillance conference. This continues the theme, focusing on oversight. With respect to two controversial programs. Surveillance on section seven oh two of Foreign Policy and a provision of section 215 that provides for a burried large scale automated collection of phone records. Both of these programs have had some serious complaints. That come to live over the past year. And so we thought it useful to examine how those arose, what the nature of the problems of the discovery is and how the Intelligence Community is responding to them and whether the response is adequate. So the discussion will be headed up by prizewinning port reporter, Charlie Savage. His book power wars is probably the best portrait of nast National Security policy making. In a president ial ministration. I will pass you on to Charli
Good morning and welcome to the Cato Institute. My name is julian sanchez, im a senior fellow here and im grateful to everyone has come out bright and early to the auditorium at cato for our 2019 surveillance conference. Weve been doing this for some five years now. When we launched this in the aftermath of disclosures about both a fake election by former contractor snowden, the nsa itself was a fairly obscure agency unfan with most americans and as we kick off our 2019 conference, we find that now even intelligence oversight is itself very much in public headlines. We have an impeachment proceeding kicked off in significant part by reports from the from the Intelligence Communitys Inspector General. We have forth coming next week a breathlessly awaited report on allegations of misuse of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act during the 2016 president ial campaign. We have proceedings aired, going to be from the house Intelligence Committee. So even intelligence overseers now are at
Folks are shuffling in. I will just go ahead and get started in the interest of encouraging them to everyone to kong regular eight again. Thanks to those of you whove stuck with us through a long and fascinating day at the 2016 Cato Institute surveillance conference. Our last pair of flash talks is going to focus on some of the global aspects of u. S. Surveillance. At cato of course were big fans of the constitution. We tend to focus very much on the Fourth Amendment and domestic law and how it regulates surveillance of american citizens and their rights. But the scope of american surveillance, both for Law Enforcement and intelligence purposes, is now really global in scale. So as a result it has implications for the human rights of people around the world but also for our political and diplomatic and economic relationships with other countries, in particular the economic interests of u. S. Companies that hope to do business around the globe. So talk about two aspects of that. Alan bu
Folks are shuffling in. I will just go ahead and get started in the interest of encouraging them to everyone to kong regular eight again. Thanks to those of you whove stuck with us through a long and fascinating day at the 2016 Cato Institute surveillance conference. Our last pair of flash talks is going to focus on some of the global aspects of u. S. Surveillance. At cato of course were big fans of the constitution. We tend to focus very much on the Fourth Amendment and domestic law and how it regulates surveillance of american citizens and their rights. But the scope of american surveillance, both for Law Enforcement and intelligence purposes, is now really global in scale. So as a result it has implications for the human rights of people around the world but also for our political and diplomatic and economic relationships with other countries, in particular the economic interests of u. S. Companies that hope to do business around the globe. So talk about two aspects of that. Alan bu