White House spokesman Jay Carney said that Obama's remarks next today would show the "outcomes of the work that has been done on the review process."
The White House said yesterday that the president was nearing the end of his soul searching about US spying reforms as he met lawmakers who oversee the intelligence community.
Obama met the delegation in Washington as part of consultations with players on all sides of the debate on how best to balance US security and privacy rights, following revelations of massive spy agency snooping by fugitive contractor Edward Snowden.
Republican House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte, who was one of the lawmakers in the meeting, called on the president to explain why such vast data mining programs -- which spy chiefs say help piece together links between terror suspects worldwide -- were necessary.
Senior US officials have indicated Obama is considering whether to permit the programs to continue while requiring data to be held either by technology companies or a third party instead of the NSA. Intelligence officers would have to obtain court permission to access the phone records.