Spyware Maker NSO Group Is Paving a Path Back Into Trump’s America

The NSO Group has hired a new public relations firm in a new effort to lobby the Trump Administration. While this is not a clear break in strategy compared to the last administration, the spyware firm is trying to focus more on individual lawmakers in an effort to remove U.S. sanctions on itself.

Now, with a new occupant in the White House, NSO Group appears to be shifting its political strategy.

The company seems to have either terminated or altered its engagement with several of its previous lobbying consultancies in Washington—some of which were closely aligned with the Democrats—and has started working with a key new lobbying partner: the Vogel Group.

Founded by Alex Vogel, who served as chief counsel to former Senate majority leader Bill Frist, the Vogel Group is providing NSO Group with “strategic advisory on cybersecurity policy matters,” according to lobbying disclosure documents filed on March 10.

The Vogel Group’s connection to the Trump administration includes areas of key interest to NSO Group. One of the Israeli spyware vendor’s new lobbyists, Jonathan Fahey, joined Vogel’s Washington, DC, office as a principal on January 29 and served in various roles during Trump’s first term, including acting director and acting principal legal adviser at Immigration and Customs Enforcement, deputy assistant secretary at the Department of Homeland Security, and general counsel to the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy—all three relevant departments for a company selling surveillance technology.

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