Printer Friendly Page
POLITICAL BRIEFINGS AT VA AND OTHER AGENCIES
DISCLOSED -- White House calls meetings lawful
as Office
of Special Counsel looks at possible illegal
coercion.

Story here...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/
wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/
25/AR2007042503046.html
Story below:
---------------
Political Briefings At Agencies Disclosed
White House Calls Meetings Lawful
By R. Jeffrey Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
White House officials conducted 20 private briefings on Republican
electoral prospects in the last midterm election for senior officials in
at least 15 government agencies covered by federal restrictions on
partisan political activity, a White House spokesman and other
administration officials said yesterday.
The previously undisclosed briefings were part of what now appears to be
a regular effort in which the White House sent senior political
officials to brief top appointees in government agencies on which seats
Republican candidates might win or lose, and how the election outcomes
could affect the success of administration policies, the officials said.
The existence of one such briefing, at the headquarters of the General
Services Administration in January, came to light last month, and the
Office of Special Counsel began an investigation into whether the
officials at the briefing felt coerced into steering federal activities
to favor those Republican candidates cited as vulnerable.
Such coercion is prohibited under a federal law, known as the Hatch Act,
meant to insulate virtually all federal workers from partisan politics.
In addition to forbidding workplace pressures meant to influence an
election outcome, the law bars the use of federal resources -- including
office buildings, phones and computers -- for partisan purposes.
The administration maintains that the previously undisclosed meetings
were appropriate. Those discussing the briefings on the record yesterday
uniformly described them as merely "informational briefings about the
political landscape." But House Oversight and Government Reform
Committee Chairman Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.), who has been
investigating the GSA briefing, said, "Politicization of departments and
agencies is a serious issue. We need to know more about these and other
briefings."
In the GSA briefing -- conducted like all the others by a deputy to
chief White House political adviser Karl Rove -- two slides were
presented showing 20 House Democrats targeted for defeat and several
dozen vulnerable Republicans.
At its completion, GSA Administrator Lurita Alexis Doan asked how GSA
projects could be used to help "our candidates," according to half a
dozen witnesses. The briefer, J. Scott Jennings, said that topic should
be discussed "off-line," the witnesses said. Doan then replied, "Oh,
good, at least as long as we are going to follow up," according to an
account given by former GSA chief acquisition officer Emily Murphy to
House investigators, according to a copy of the transcript.
"Something was going to take place potentially afterwards" regarding
Doan's request, GSA deputy director of communications Jennifer Millikin
told investigators she concluded at the time.
Doan, appearing before the oversight committee on March 28, said, "I
believe that all around government, there are non-career employees who
meet to discuss different ways to advance policies and programs of the
administration." But she added that it "is not the same as asking
federal employees to engage in partisan political activities in the
workplace," a request she said she did not recall making.
White House spokesman Scott Stanzel said that he was not familiar with
the details of the briefings for other agencies, but that the projected
fate of specific candidates was "certainly" discussed. He also said that
in addition to the 20 briefings given in 2006-2007, "there were others
throughout the last six years," making clear that this was a common Bush
administration practice during each election cycle.
Stanzel said that Rove "occasionally spoke to political appointees at
departments and agencies" but that his presentations were more "off the
cuff" and were meant to convey "their importance to advancing the
president's agenda."
At the Commerce Department, briefings by White House political officials
were conducted in 2002, in March 2004, and in April 2006, according to
department spokesman E. Richard Mills, who described them as "purely
informational," legal and appropriate. More than 100 political
appointees at the department were invited to each one, and they were
held in the headquarters building's main auditorium.
A smaller White House briefing was also conducted every two years for
what Mills described as the department's senior political staff,
including Secretary Carlos M. Gutierrez. He could not explain why that
meeting was separate from the others.
Twenty-eight political appointees at the Environmental Protection Agency
attended such a briefing last July 17 at the White House executive
office complex, and an unknown number attended one at those offices the
following month, according to EPA spokeswoman Jennifer Wood. She said
that Jennings gave the presentation at the first meeting and that Sara
M. Taylor, who directs the White House Office of Political Affairs, gave
the second one.
Spokesmen at the departments of Veterans Affairs and Transportation also
confirmed that their political appointees received such briefings at
their headquarters. Stanzel confirmed that they were also given at the
departments of Health and Human Services, Interior, Labor, Housing and
Urban Development, Treasury, Education, Agriculture and Energy, as well
as NASA, the Small Business Administration, the Office of Science and
Technology Policy, the Office of National Drug Control Policy and the
U.S. Agency for International Development.
By the end of yesterday afternoon, all of those describing the briefings
on the record had adopted a uniform phrase in response to a reporter's
inquiries: They were, each official said, "informational briefings about
the political landscape."
At the Department of Homeland Security, spokesman Russ Knocke at first
said "there is no indication that any meeting on election targets,
congressional districts or candidate support or assistance took place at
the department." He then called back to alter that remark, saying he had
no indication that such a meeting was held at department "offices." A
department official said employees were briefed on "morale" but did not
elaborate.
Scott J. Bloch, director of the Office of Special Counsel, alluded to
the multiple briefings in an interview Monday, saying that "we have had
allegations" and "received information" about similar talks that were
held elsewhere besides GSA.
"Political forecasts, just generally . . . I do not regard as illegal
political activity," Bloch added. But he said his office would examine
whether it was appropriate to use federal facilities or resources as
well as review exactly what was said. "Where you cross the line is where
you get into the slant of someone being elected or defeated" or trying
to get a political party into or out of power, he said.
Justin Busch, a GSA appointee who attended the briefing there, told the
investigators that Doan's comment made him "very uncomfortable." Dennis
R. Smith, the regional GSA administrator in Boston, recalled a "feeling
of unease" at Doan's additional mention of the need to manage a GSA
building visit by then-incoming House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.).
House Democratic Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel (Ill.) cited Doan's
reported remarks yesterday in a Brookings Institution speech that
criticized the Bush administration for using "all the levers of power"
to promote its political interests and attempting to make the federal
government "a stepchild of the Republican Party."
Staff writer Spencer Hsu contributed to this report.
---------------
Larry Scott --