Posted on 07/03/2009 6:24:56 AM PDT by Dubya-M-DeesWent2SyriaStupid!
Key Republicans in both the House and the Senate are accusing the White House of giving incomplete and misleading information to investigators probing the presidents abrupt firing of AmeriCorps Inspector General Gerald Walpin. In return, the White House is hinting that documents concerning its actions in the Walpin affair may be protected by executive privilege.
Both developments are part of an escalating conflict between GOP lawmakers and the Obama administration. Republicans are deeply skeptical of the White House explanation for the June 10 firing of Walpin, a tough investigator who had been probing misuse of AmeriCorps money by Sacramento, Calif., mayor and prominent Obama supporter Kevin Johnson. And the administration seems determined to conceal its dealings with AmeriCorps and the organization that oversees it, the Corporation for National and Community Service.
Walpin was dismissed without warning on June 10, when he received a call from Norman Eisen, the special counsel to the president for ethics and government reform. Eisen told Walpin he had one hour either to resign or be fired an apparent violation of a law giving special job protections to inspectors general. When Walpin refused to quit, he was terminated.
After lawmakers demanded an explanation, the White House said Walpin had been confused, disoriented [and] unable to answer questions at a May 20 meeting with the board of the Corporation for National and Community Service. The Johnson case was discussed at that meeting, with Walpin harshly criticizing board members for their support of a decision to let Johnson off easy.
Theres no question that members of the board, both Democrat and Republican, were unhappy with Walpins criticism of them. They agreed that Alan Solomont, the Democratic fundraiser appointed by President Barack Obama as chairman of the board, should tell the White House what had happened.
But now, at least three board members have told congressional investigators they did not specifically recommend that the administration fire Walpin. Instead, they simply wanted the chairman to express their concerns.
The White House claims it investigated the matter; Eisen told House and Senate aides that officials did an extensive review of complaints about Walpins performance before deciding to fire him. But there are serious doubts as to whether the White House did, in fact, conduct a serious investigation before getting rid of Walpin.
The three board members have told Congress that the White House did not contact them during the review. (One was told about Walpins firing at about the time it happened, and the other two were contacted days later.) No one from the White House contacted Walpin himself, or his top assistant, as part of the review.
All were present at the contentious May 20 meeting. If officials at the White House were really trying to discover what happened at that session, congressional investigators say, it would have wanted to hear their version of events. But no questions were asked.
In particular, investigators are puzzled by the White Houses failure to contact Walpin concerning the charge that he was confused and disoriented at the meeting. Was he, in fact, confused? If so, was it the result of some medical condition or other problem the board might not have known about? Some other distraction? The White House never asked.
All in all, the extensive review appeared more of a sham review an exercise designed to support a decision that had already been made. Nor has the White House been open about it. Information provided to my staff by Mr. Eisen has been incomplete and misleading, Republican Rep. Darrell Issa wrote in a July 1 letter to White House counsel Gregory Craig.
For its part, the White House is hinting broadly that it might invoke executive privilege to keep documents from Congress. Your questions seek information about the White Houses internal decision-making process, Craig wrote to Sen. Charles Grassley on June 30. These questions implicate core executive branch confidentiality interests. At another point, Craig pledged to cooperate to the fullest extent possible consistent with constitutional and statutory obligations.
The message, apparently, is for GOP investigators to back off. But that hasnt happened. In his letter to the White House, Issa is still trying to get information. The White Houses willingness to provide the facts about the Walpin firing, wrote Issa, will go a long way to demonstrate the president is committed to running the most transparent White House in history.
Byron York, The Examiners chief political correspondent, can be contacted at byork@washingtonexaminer.com. His column appears on Tuesday and Friday, and his stories and blog posts can be read daily at ExaminerPolitics.com.
Let me translate that for any who don’t understand Obamalingo yet:
“the White House is hinting that documents concerning its actions in the Walpin affair may be protected by executive privilege.”
Don’t question the one. He doesn’t want anyone to begin thinking for themselves or questioning his ability to control the masses.
Do as your told, vote as the one demands or be subject to inquiry, firing, media smearing and political sunder.
Watergate II ? If Helen Thomas has had it with the O and his press, she could get on this one big time and give herself a glorious finish to her career. For once in your life Helen do something good.
I agree. Why is the media not asking Gibbs about Walpin and the WH using executive privilege?
Why does the MSM do nothing but Jackson reports,fluff-pieces on Obama, and investigate the crap out of Palin?
There is no MSM, it is SRM. State Run Media!!! They are in the bag and report fluff because that is what thye are told. To quote Helen, “do you think we are puppets?” Yes!!!!
Tampering with independent investigations are a federal felonies. There is a pattern of similar illegal conduct. RICO violations are obvious. Also obstruction of justice. Corruption and payoffs are standard in Illinois. The Old Chicago Mob revisited. Even a 'super majority' in Congress will not silence independent cries for impeachment.
Watch 0's popularity ratings fall to - 10% soon.
Zero has screwed the pooch. These type of allegations brought down Richard Nixon. And he won office by the largest margin in history just before the Watergate Scandal emerged. Nixon was riding high in the popularity polls.
It all sounds reasonable but why do I have a feeling 0bama has Eric Holder and he will get away with anything? I fear the corruption surrounding 0bama will go unscathed. The crook has the media/FBI/powers of the Presidency and Soro’s and other very wealthy people in his pocket.ACORN, other chicago mob entities and the government itself of complete take-over and control is his unrelentless power.
“Zero has screwed the pooch. These type of allegations brought down Richard Nixon. And he won office by the largest margin in history just before the Watergate Scandal emerged. Nixon was riding high in the popularity polls. “
Bingo!
Don’t-cha-know,
OThuga needs no law nor permission nor sanity.
Treason and destruction are his goals and ways of operating.
It’s the Gestapo waltz . . . with a cheesy smile/smirk . . .
“OFF WITH THEIR HEADS” . . . is just his quirk.
May God dump them all in the pits they have dug for the rest of us . . . ASAP.
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