The Bush gang seems to have a preoccupation with email, or more specifically, using email accounts that aren’t archived under law.
When White House deputy political director J. Scott Jennings communicated with Justice Department officials about the appointment of a controversial U.S. Attorney, he used a private email account registered to the Republican National Committee. When Karl Rove sends emails, 95% of the time, he avoids his White House account and uses an RNC account. The White House public affairs office reportedly does the same thing. The president has decided not to use email at all because, as he put it, he’s concerned about “different record requests that could happen to a president.”
This may sound like trivia, but it raises a series of questions. Why are White House officials, working on government business, using private RNC email accounts instead of their White House accounts? Perhaps because the Presidential Records Act mandates thorough record-keeping, which Rove & Co. have hoped to avoid. In other words, White House emails leave a paper trail; RNC emails don’t. If you’re in the West Wing and you don’t want anyone, ever, to find out what you’re up to, you’d avoid using the email system that ensures accountability.
With this in mind, House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) had a good idea.
Today, House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-CA) issued letters to the Republican National Committee and the Bush-Cheney ’04 Campaign directing them to preserve all emails by and for White House officials, and to meet with the committee about the legal issues involved in conducting official government business using partisan email accounts. From Waxman’s letter:
“The e-mails of White House officials maintained on RNC e-mail accounts may be relevant to multiple congressional investigations. For this reason, the Committee directs you to preserve all e-mails sent or received by White House officials using e-mail accounts under your control.”
It sounds like a wise approach. I just hope it’s not too late.
Waxman seems to appreciate the fact that White House emails, sent through RNC addresses, are likely the key to revealing important communications from senior White House officials. His correspondence today asks the RNC and BC04 officials to meet with House Oversight and Government Reform Committee staffers as early as next week to respond to five issues:
(1) Who has access to the e-mail accounts maintained by the RNC;
(2) What policies, guidance, and procedures govern the use and preservation of the email accounts maintained by the RNC that have been used by White House officials;
(3) What agreements, if any, has the RNC entered into with the White House, the National Archives, or other government agencies regarding the e-mail accounts maintained by the RNC that have been used by White House officials;
(4) What steps have been taken to preserve the e-mail accounts maintained by the RNC that have been used by White House officials;
(5) What assurance can the RNC provide the Committee that no e-mails involving official White House business have been destroyed or altered.
Good questions, all. And as long as we’re on the subject, I thought I’d remind readers of similar questions Dan Froomkin posed to the president’s communications office.
1) Does White House policy allow White House staffers to use non-White House e-mail addresses for official White House business? Does it prohibit it? What is the policy?
2) Would these e-mails be treated any differently from official White House e-mails when it comes to archiving or subpoena purposes?
3) Does it create either impropriety or the appearance of impropriety that gwb43.com is a domain owned by the Republican National Committee?
4) Do other White House staffers regularly use non-White House e-mail accounts for White House business, and if so, why?
5) Does non-White House e-mail fulfill security requirements for White House communications?
6) If other non-White House e-mail accounts are used, who are the providers for all of the other accounts? (Any others besides the RNC?)
7) Does White House policy allow White House staffers to use non-White House e-mail addresses from their computers, even for non-official business? I’m told that during the Clinton administration, access to external e-mail, including Web mail, was shut off from White House (eop.gov) computers. Was there a conscious change of policy by the Bush administration?
8) Have there been any recent changes in policy relating to e-mail practices, or are changes in policy contemplated?
Stay tuned.