Politicizing the GSA

The General Services Administration generally isn’t one of those departments that captures the public’s attention. The GSA is, by design, a behind-the-scenes agency — it helps other parts of the government function by managing federal contracts.

Of course, we’re in the midst of the Bush Era, during which every government office is little more than another political tool, which Karl Rove can exploit for the GOP’s gain.

Witnesses have told congressional investigators that the chief of the General Services Administration and a deputy in Karl Rove’s political affairs office at the White House joined in a videoconference earlier this year with top GSA political appointees, who discussed ways to help Republican candidates.

With GSA Administrator Lurita Alexis Doan and up to 40 regional administrators on hand, J. Scott Jennings, the White House’s deputy director of political affairs, gave a PowerPoint presentation on Jan. 26 of polling data about the 2006 elections.

When Jennings concluded his presentation to the GSA political appointees, Doan allegedly asked them how they could “help ‘our candidates’ in the next elections,” according to a March 6 letter to Doan from Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.), chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. Waxman said in the letter that one method suggested was using “targeted public events, such as the opening of federal facilities around the country.”

I wish I could say I’m surprised, but let’s not kid ourselves here. Is there anything in the federal government the Bush White House hasn’t politicized? The irony is, all of these efforts were perceived as necessary to help ensure electoral success. Instead of just doing a good job running the federal government, Republicans decided it was easier to manipulate levers of power to try to fool voters. They had it backwards — if they’d actually focused on performance, they wouldn’t have had to fool anyone.

Principles aside, however, this GSA story has the potential to be a huge problem (that is, another one) for the Bush administration.

To be sure, the GSA has been a source of trouble for the administration for quite a while. Remember David Safavian? He was the highest-ranking administration official charged in the Abramoff scandal — and he was head of the GSA. Moreover, we learned in December Bush’s choice to head the GSA has tried to undermine the ability of the agency’s inspector general to audit contracts for fraud or waste.

But today’s revelations are far more serious. For one thing, the Hatch Act strictly prohibits executive-branch employees from using their positions for political purposes. This would be a textbook example of what officials are not legally permitted to do — the whole point of the videoconference was for Karl Rove’s office to give Republicans credit for opening various federal facilities nationwide. Given the description of their chat, it was apparently quite blatant and it’s likely several GSA leaders are going to lose their jobs.

The White House defense for all of this is transparently ridiculous. The videoconference, a Bush spokesperson said, was simply to offer GSA administrators “a factual assessment of the political landscape.” These administrators manage federal contracts — why do they need a briefing from the White House on the political landscape?

But let’s go one step further. GSA administrators spoke with Scott Jennings, the White House’s deputy director of political affairs and Karl Rove’s right-hand man. If that name sounds familiar, there’s a very good reason for it. A TPM Muckraker reader explains:

By late fall of 2006, it was clear that the GOP was in a tailspin. The only remaining levers of power in Republican hands were held by the administration, and it had just two years left to reverse the tide. Evidently, Karl Rove decided that he had been insufficiently aggressive in using federal agencies to bolster the chances of Republican candidates. So he dispatched Jennings to convince the minions at GSA to ensure that every new federal project would have a Republican cutting the ribbon. (It’s worth noting that no one has bothered suggesting that Doan invited Jennings. That’s not how this works. Jennings was there because the White House sent him, and Doan went along. She’s likely to take the fall here, but this came straight from the White House.)

One of the puzzling aspects of the US Attorney purge is that it wasn’t completed until after the 2006 elections. So far, most allegations have focused on the notion that these US Attorneys failed to do enough to help Republican candidates win in 2006, by failing to investigate enough Democrats or to pursue scurrilous allegations of voter fraud. But it’s looking more and more like what happened here has more to do with 2008 than with 2006. Only two USAs were asked to step down before the elections: Cummins, to make room for a specific Rove disciple, and Chiara, whose office was a mess. The plan to dismiss the rest had festered for well over a year, but it kicked into high gear immediately after the elections. Sampson sent out the formal plan on Nov. 15, marking its importance ‘High’. “An associate of Rove” told the Times that Rove learned of the plan in November. And…wait for it…remember that 18 day gap? It begins on November 15.

What we’re going to find, if Congress successfully subpoenas officials or their e-mails, is that after the Republicans got routed in November of 2006 a panicked Karl Rove turned up the flame under lots of schemes that had simmered on the back burners for months or years. New orders went out – learn the lessons of the exit polling, and make sure that 2008 brings success. The White House, in its panic, abandoned caution, and got sloppy. It left its fingerprints all over the sorts of things it had generally manipulated at arms-length. And the man who headed up the effort, by all indications, was Karl Rove’s right hand, J. Scott Jennings.

Paul Kiel builds off the GSA controversy to call this the “unifying theory.” Sounds right to me.

color me unimpressed.

Yes, Bush and Rove have taken politicizing government ot new heights (lows), but if publicizing “the opening of federal facilities” is all they’ve got, then let’s just move on.

  • I hope that somewhere, in some way, that the slimy pig that is Karl Rove is held accountable for the damage he has done to this country. ‘Course I’m being unfair in comparing a creature such as a pig to something as low as Rove.

  • But if the Republicans had focussed on performance, then a) they would have run the risk of showing that government can be a force for good, b) it would have required spending money that would therefore not have been available for giving to wealthy supporters, and c) increased expectations regarding government services might lead to increased demands and thus pressures to raise taxes (or at least minimize tax cuts for the wealthy).

  • Warning Tinfoil Hat Time.

    Maybe it’s my sleepy eyes, but I’m starting to get the impression that the WH is the epicenter of this whole Republicon crime game not one part of it. Each scandal seems to point to the fact that key portions of the checks/balances were disarmed thru bribery, intimidation and and the bureaucratic knife in the back. I’m starting to think that congressional Repubs who were bought off to allow The Bush Crime Family to consolidate control–most of those who landed in hot water are part of Newt’s class of 94 which seems to be by design. I seem to remember that in halcyon days of Ronnie Raygun the Congressional Repubs gave the Gipper a hard time when it saw fit. Stupid ole me suspects that Cunningham, Lewis and Hunter were paid off by the WH thru intermediaries to look the other way to allow Haliburton, Blackwater etc to gain contracts and access to BLACK OPS programs, the juiciest and most lucrative contracts of all as oversight is disappeared in the name of National Security.

    Guess it’s time to write screed about black helos.

  • Actually, Paul Kiel just introduces the Unifying Theory of “a longtime TPM reader.” Whoever that is, s/he’s produced my nominee for Read of the Month.

  • So now we’ve got another “What did the president know, and when did he know it” situation. If Shrub knew about this conference, and that it might violate the Hatch Act, he was legally bound to stop it. But if he knew about it, and didn’t do so–to my mind, that’s an impeachable offense. And Madam Speaker wouldn’t be breaking her promise if she did pursue it.

  • A lot of us speculated that the Bushies would take more and more desperate measures as they lost power or ran out of time. Luckily it seems that they are incompetent even in desperation. It all hinged on 11/7 though.

    I don’t want to disparage good Texans, but that state is a little backwater dictatorship. And they ridiculed Carter for bringing country ways to the Whitehouse. Bush and Rove are evil little hicks.

  • This is yet another example of “the raping of America” by Bu$hCo; there is no “aura of mutual consent” here. Can we “extraodinary rendition-ize” these scalawags to Gitmo NOW?! They’re terrorizing the Constitution itself—and the Republic—and the People.

    Well—almost all of them. I want Rove kept here, and processed into monkey chow. we can feed him to those primates that were fashioning weapons a couple’a weeks ago, and then turn them loose amidst the next gathering of the NRCC….

  • I think an analogy for how the Bushies ruin run the country, is the way Delay gerry-mandered the voting districts in Texas. Rove is detail-orient which is another way to say thinks small. The Bushes have always had a problem with that vision thing.

  • Well then.

    It would appear to me that all Bush appointees to Justice need to be reviewed and immediately impeached if they have been playing politics instead of doing their jobs.

    If these guys are doing what it looks like they’re doing, the elections of 2008 will be even more fraudulent than the others we’ve seen mucked with.

    I hope Dems put on the thick gloves and go after these weasels with gusto, because desperate cornered animals will do some really crazy shit.

  • Aligning government operations with openly political activities and orienting them towards political objectives is textbook fascism. The Nazis called it “Gleichschaltung”.

  • Former Dan (#4) has it right.

    I suggest you go read William L. Shirer’s “The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich” for an excellent account of how the German vast rightwing conspiracy worked after 1933 in transforming all political, social and economic institutions to the service of the party. “The corporate state” is the organizing principle of fascism, and is exactly what’s going on here. One wonders how many times GWB sat on grand-daddy Preston’s knee and listened to his lament of how good things were done in Germany before the war when they “knew how to do business.” Let’s remember that granddad only managed to avoid an indictment for treason under the Trading With The Enemy Act in 1942 by buying himself a Senate seat.

  • Yes, Bush and Rove have taken politicizing government ot new heights (lows), but if publicizing “the opening of federal facilities” violating the Hatch Act is all they’ve got, then let’s just move on.

    Fixed it for you, Neil S.

  • Comments are closed.