White House Wants First Crack at RNC Emails
By Matt Renner
From: http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/042007J.shtml
Friday 20 April 2007
The Congressional investigation into the US attorney firings has revealed that Bush administration officials have been
communicating through unofficial email accounts, many of which are administered and archived by the Republican National
Committee.
The RNC has stated that some records of these emails exist, but the RNC has yet to turn over any of the information to
Congress, despite repeated requests from multiple Congressional committees.
Now, in an extraordinary move, the White House is demanding preemptive access to the emails held by the RNC, claiming
the emails may contain information regarding ongoing Congressional investigations.
In a letter to the RNC, the White House instructed the committee to turn the emails over to the president's lawyers
before Congress has access to them.
There are signs that the White House is preparing to invoke executive privilege to prevent the RNC from turning the
emails over to Congress. The Supreme Court has recognized the right of presidents to refuse to give certain types of
information to Congress or the Judicial Branch.
According to Colombia University Law Professor Michael Dorf, in the area of executive privilege, "the law remains
remarkably unclear."
Neither the White House nor the RNC returned repeated requests for comment for this article.
However, a letter Tuesday, written to RNC lawyers by Special Counsel to the President Emmet Flood, instructs the RNC to turn over email
records to the White House on the grounds of executive privilege. In response to the request by the House Judiciary
Committee for email records pertaining to the US attorney firing investigation, Flood said "[w]e understand that ... you
will provide the Office of Counsel to the President with an opportunity to review such material before communicating it
to any other person."
In the White House letter, Flood states that such preemptive access is necessary "to determine, among other things, (1)
whether any materials implicating the Presidential Records Act are, in fact, involved, and (2) whether, the Executive
Branch may need to take measures necessary to protect its other legal interests in communications responsive to
[Congressional] requests."
In response to this letter, Anne Weisman, chief counsel for the nonpartisan government watchdog group Citizens for
Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), said, "We do not see any legitimate claim of [executive] privilege here,
given that White House officials were using outside email accounts, subject to outside control, and therefore with no
legitimate expectation for [presidential] privacy."
After hearing testimony from Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, Sen. Charles Schumer (D-New York) addressed the
possible claims of executive privilege regarding the RNC emails. "Look at the history here. The claims of privilege
almost never work." He added, "[a]nd it doesn't take a year or two, it happens quickly."
According to Peter Shane, an Ohio State University law professor who specializes in separation of powers issues,
executive privilege is "subject to balancing," meaning that the right to withhold information from Congress is not
absolute and would have to be determined by the Supreme Court. Documents or communications regarding state secrets or
national security are considered to be the "most privileged," and the hardest for Congress to gain access to. State
secrets are not at issue in this situation. Instead, the White House would rely on the less-weighty "Presidential
Privacy Privilege," which is meant to allow presidential advisers to communicate freely, without fear of their
statements being made public.
Shane says that the president's privacy privilege is outweighed in this case by the Congressional need to conduct
investigations. Also, a claim to executive privilege in this case could backfire, as it would be an admission that
privileged communications were made using an email system under the control of an outside agency. According to Shane
this would be a violation of the Presidential Records Act.
"This is the Catch-22 the Bush administration is caught in," Shane said. "If they say that the subject matter of these
communications makes them susceptible to executive privilege claims, then they should have been sent through official
government channels, not through unofficial emails. If these communications are of this kind, the Bush administration is
clearly in violation of the Presidential Records Act."
The Presidential Records Act requires presidents to preserve all records that relate to the "activities, deliberations,
decisions and policies that reflect the performance of [the president's] constitutional, statutory, or other official or
ceremonial duties...."
The RNC has stated that roughly 50 White House staff members have held RNC email accounts since 2000. The White House
has said that 22 active staffers have such accounts. This number has not been verified, and the amount of email
correspondence using the RNC email accounts is also unknown.
Rep. Henry Waxman (D-California) chairman of the Oversight and Government Reform Committee, which is spearheading
multiple investigations into the conduct of the Bush administration, wrote a letter summarizing his attempts to gain access to RNC email records. His committee seeks "basic information about who at the
White House used RNC accounts and how many emails they sent or received over RNC accounts."
According to Waxman, "[t]his information is relevant to the [Oversight] Committee's inquiry into whether violations of
the Presidential Records Act have occurred."
In an April 12 letter to the RNC, Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee John Conyers (D-Michigan) responded to White House demands that
RNC emails be turned over to White House lawyers for review before Congress gets to see the documents.
Conyers asked the RNC to provide email records pertaining to the US attorney firings "directly to us, as quickly as
possible, rather than diverting them to into a White House review.... We would consider that to be an unjustified delay
... and potentially as an obstruction of our investigation...."
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Matt Renner is a reporter for Truthout.