Cameron: UK public has shrugged off NSA leaks
Prime Minister David Cameron said Thursday he believes the British public has largely shrugged off the espionage disclosures of former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden, telling lawmakers that people seem to be satisfied that U.K. spies are doing their jobs.
The editor of Britain's Guardian newspaper, which played a critical role in bringing Snowden's revelations to light, said recently that there had been "barely a whisper" from British politicians about the disclosures. Alan Rusbridger contrasted Britain's political response to the impassioned debate in the United States鈥攚here intelligence chiefs have repeatedly been summoned to Congress, lawmakers have called for an end to domestic surveillance and top officials have proposed reforms to the NSA's work.
Cameron, however, suggested Thursday that Britons simply weren't that upset.
"I don't think Snowden's had an enormous public impact," he told Parliament. "I think the public reaction, as I judge it, has not been one of: 'Shock! Horror!' It's been much more: 'Intelligence agencies carry out intelligence work. Good.'"
Cameron had been fielding questions from lawmakers about whether the leaks鈥攚hich exposed mass surveillance activities by the NSA and its British counterpart, GCHQ鈥攈ad shaken public confidence in Britain's intelligence agencies.
Cameron said he believed the agencies' oversight was "robust," but added: "I don't rule out trying to improve it."
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