But while the House is moving to complete a bill before the deadline, it remains to be seen how the political turbulence surrounding the use of FISA in the Russia case will play out. Some Republicans have discussed pushing for a short-term extension of the provisions — which already happened once — to permit more extensive deliberations about FISA.

As expected, the draft bill would extend all of the expiring provisions until Dec. 1, 2023. They include a famous provision known as Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act, which permits the F.B.I. to collect business records deemed relevant to a terrorism investigation. From 2006 until 2015, Section 215 was the basis of a secret program by which the National Security Agency systematically vacuumed up Americans’ domestic phone logs in bulk.

At the same time, as previously reported, the bill would end legal authority for a defunct system, created in 2015 by the USA Freedom Act, that ended that bulk records program but permitted N.S.A. counterterrorism analysts to gain access to logs of Americans’ phone calls that remained in the hands of telephone companies.

The National Security Agency has already shut down that program because it was expensive, delivered little intelligence of value and experienced frequent rules violations, as when phone companies inadvertently provided more records than the agency had legal authority to gather.