anyone smell butterfield?

Posted on Tuesday 10 April 2007


The Next Bush Scandal?

The slowly-unfolding disclosure that some White House aides use non-government e-mail servers to conduct official business may soon be reaching scandal proportions.

As John D. McKinnon writes in today’s Wall Street Journal (subscription required): "The widespread use of private email accounts by some top White House officials is sparking a congressional probe into the practice and whether it violates a post-Nixon law requiring that White House deliberations be documented.

"A top Democratic lawmaker says outside email accounts were used in an attempt to avoid scrutiny; the White House says their purpose was to avoid using government resources for political activities, although they were used to discuss the firing of U.S. attorneys."

Most of the e-mail accounts at issue are on Republican National Committee servers. For instance: "Susan Ralston, until recently presidential adviser Karl Rove’s assistant at the White House, appears to have used at least four outside email accounts: a ‘gwb’ domain account, a ‘georgewbush.com’ account, and an ‘rnchq.org’ account – all run by the RNC – plus an AOL account. She once emailed two associates of lobbyist Jack Abramoff, ‘I now have an RNC blackberry which you can use to e-mail me at any time. No security issues like my WH email.’ …

"’At the end of the day, it looks like they were trying to avoid the records act… by operating official business off the official systems,’ said John Podesta, who worked in the White House for the entire Clinton presidency, including a stint as chief of staff…

"White House officials dispute the criticisms, saying the purpose of the RNC accounts has been to avoid running afoul of another federal law, the Hatch Act. It prohibits many federal officials from engaging in political activity on government time or with government resources."

Will these e-mails ever see the light of day? McKinnon writes: "The White House and RNC said the RNC is preserving the emails generated by White House officials on the RNC’s computers, and that they are exempt from the RNC’s normal policy of erasing emails after 30 days."
Remember July 13th, 1973?
Alexander ButterfieldIt was a Friday afternoon in July, and the witness was just a small fry: Alexander Butterfield, who kept President Nixon’s schedule and handled his paper flow. Three staff members of the Senate Watergate Committee were questioning him, preparing for his public testimony the following Monday.

Trolling, one asked whether there might be something down at the White House, some sort of recording system?

 Butterfield took a breath.

"I was hoping you fellows wouldn’t ask me that," he said.

And with that, history turned a corner. What Butterfield revealed that afternoon in 1973 — and on television to the senators and the world three days later – was electrifying news: For 2 ½ years, Nixon had been secretly taping his conversations.
Sooner or later, there will be a chink. Are the RNC emails it?

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