A little-noticed provision in the Senate’s latest government funding bill has renewed Republican scrutiny of surveillance practices used during the Biden administration in Jan. 6–related investigations.
What began as a routine vote to avert a government shutdown escalated into a cross-chamber dispute after House Republicans learned that senators had added language offering legal protections available only to members of the upper chamber.
The provision would allow senators who were targets of former special counsel Jack Smith’s “Arctic Frost” investigation to sue the federal government if they were surveilled without prior notice.
The provision covers eight GOP senators: Lindsey Graham, Bill Hagerty, Josh Hawley, Dan Sullivan, Tommy Tuberville, Ron Johnson, Cynthia Lummis and Marsha Blackburn. If they pursue a claim, each of them could be entitled to $500,000.
House Republicans said they were caught off guard by the change.
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) called the House back from a 54-day recess to address the unexpected addition, characterizing it as a last-minute move that he and most members had not been informed about causing undue frustration.
Lawmakers argued that the provision granted legal protections to senators while offering no comparable remedy for House members, creating what they described as an uneven and unacceptable disparity.
“We had no idea that was dropped in at the last minute, and I did not appreciate that, nor did most of the House members,” Johnson told reporters this week.
Social media amplified the frustration. Rep. John Rose (R-TN) criticized the Senate on X following an interview with Newsmax.
“@SpeakerJohnson has every right to be angry—so am I, and so are taxpayers in Tennessee and across America,” he wrote. “Republican Senators secretly tucked in a clause to hand THEMSELVES up to $500,000 of your money for being targeted by Biden’s DOJ—without telling us. Half a million for them, but NOTHING for the thousands of J6ers.”
Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) expressed similar discontent, labeling the arrangement “shady” and a “fubar.”
“These senators slipped in a provision to reopen the government that guarantees them $500k if DOJ settles their Arctic Frost lawsuit,” she wrote. “And we’re supposed to be okay with that? What about J6? This is outrageous. Really disappointed to see some of the names on this list. You can’t self-deal like this—especially not by weaponizing a government shutdown. Absolutely ridiculous, @LeaderJohnThune.”
Rep. Greg Steube (R-Fla.) adopted a sharper tone, voting against the stopgap funding bill and denouncing the provision as “self-dealing.”
He said he would not back any measure that provided special protections to senators and predicted that the Senate would reject any attempt by the House to roll it back.
Despite the internal tensions, House Republicans ultimately voted to advance the legislation and avoid a prolonged government shutdown.
The measure funds several federal agencies — including Veterans Affairs, Agriculture and others — through January. A Democratic effort to extend expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies was left out, though Senate leaders said the issue would be taken up again next month.
New reporting suggests the Jan. 6–related surveillance extended beyond members of the Senate. Investigators working for former special counsel Jack Smith reportedly obtained the phone records of former Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and former Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-Texas), further fueling Republican concerns about partisan overreach during the Biden administration.
The dispute highlights mounting friction within the GOP, as House members object to what they view as preferential treatment afforded to senators. With new legal protections now in place for the upper chamber, House Republicans must manage both internal discontent and the broader political implications of the continuing Jan. 6 investigations.
The episode also raises broader questions about government accountability and the perception of self-interest at a pivotal moment in the legislative process.