Waxman Hits AG on E-mails
Roll Call Staff
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House Democrats are preparing a new line of investigation into Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, suggesting that as White House counsel, Gonzales allowed staff members to continue using Republican National Committee e-mail accounts to conduct official government business, in violation of the Presidential Records Act.
The new allegation against Gonzales is part of a report released Monday by Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.), chairman of the Oversight and Government Reform Committee, summarizing the investigation to date into RNC e-mail accounts maintained by White House officials.
Republicans argue that Democrats have no evidence to support such a charge, and that the investigation is becoming a waste of time. In response to a question about Waxmans report on Monday, White House Press Secretary Tony Snow said, Weve seen a number of times right now where people have been putting together investigations to see what sticks. They have had very little success so far. This is an administration that is very careful about obeying the law.
Waxman began investigating RNC e-mail accounts when it became clear that White House officials had used RNC accounts to discuss disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff, the firing of U.S. attorneys and a briefing given at the General Services Administration by a White House political deputy.
In response to subpoenas issued by the Oversight Committee, the RNC has provided the panel with data on the number of White House e-mail accounts, the number of messages those accounts cover and the number of e-mails the RNC has retained.
According to Waxmans report, 88 White House officials including top political adviser Karl Rove, former Chief of Staff Andy Card and former political director Ken Mehlman maintained RNC e-mail accounts while working at the White House, but many of the e-mails sent and received over these accounts have not been retained by the RNC. Waxman claims, for example, that none of Mehlmans e-mails have been preserved by the RNC.
Waxmans committee has a 2001 memo from then-counsel Gonzales reminding White House staff that electronic communications related to official business must be preserved and that staff members must only use the authorized e-mail system for all official electronic communications.
Susan Ralston, Karl Roves former assistant, told the committee in May that she and Rove searched his RNC e-mail accounts for messages responsive to investigations of Enron and the vice presidents Energy task force, and turned those results over to the Counsels Office. Waxmans committee therefore concludes that Gonzales may have been aware in 2001 that Mr. Rove was using RNC accounts for official communications. Yet it was not until six years later [March of this year] that the White House wrote to the RNC instructing it to preserve any emails or documents that may relate to the official business of the Executive office of the president that may be in the possession of the RNC.
Republicans argue that since the RNC has not yet produced actual e-mails, Waxman does not know that official business was being discussed in those messages. None of this matters until we actually search them, one Republican staffer said.
RNC spokeswoman Tracey Schmitt said in an e-mail: It is troubling that Henry Waxmans committee jumped the gun and appears to be representing Democrats partisan spin as fact. Not only have we been clear that we are continuing our efforts to search for emails, but there is no basis for an assumption that any email not already found would be of an official nature, she said.
Snow said during his daily press briefing that the White House staff e-mail accounts at the RNC were set up ... on a model based on the prior administration, which had done it the same way, in order to try to avoid Hatch Act violations ... these were designed precisely to avoid Hatch Act violations that prohibit the use of government assets for certain political activities.
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