-Caveat Lector-

http://writ.news.findlaw.com/dean/20040423.html

A Controversial Choice for the Position of Archivist of the United States:
Part of the Bush Administration's Secrecy Strategy?
By JOHN W. DEAN
----
Friday, Apr. 23, 2004

On April 8, the U. S. Senate received the President's nomination for a new
Archivist of the United States -- historian Allen Weinstein. For most
Americans, this is an obscure post. But the Weinstein nomination has rightly
been gathering increasing attention.

Indeed, within the archival and historical communities, the nomination has
sent sirens screaming and bells clanging. No fewer than nine professional
organizations that deal with government records have expressed concern --
faulting Weinstein for his excessive secrecy.

As I have argued in my latest book, President Bush has had a problem with
excessive secrecy for quite awhile. As Governor of Texas, he made sure to
block any later access to his gubernatorial records. As President, he has
tried to seal off the government from scrutiny in numerous ways.

Such secrecy is not a partisan matter. Rather, it is an issue of good
government versus bad government -- and secrecy smells of bad government.

Why is President Bush so eager to switch archivists? Bruce Craig of the
National Coalition for History explains http://hnn.us/comments/33519.html
that the Administration is likely motivated both by "the sensitive nature of
certain presidential and executive department records expected to be opened
in the near future," and also by "genuine concern in the White House that
the president may not be re-elected."

Craig also notes that "in January 2005, the first batch of records (the
mandatory 12 years of closure having passed) relating to the president's
father's administration will be subject to the Presidential Records Act
(PRA) and could be opened."

Finally, Craig (like many others) also reports that there is White House
concern about the release of the 9/11 Commission records.

Bush's Earlier Texas Trick To Hide His Gubernatorial Records

Texas has one of the nation's strongest public information laws. But
Governor Bush wanted to keep his papers secret anyway. Accordingly, in 1997,
he sought and obtained a change in Texas law to help him do so.

The new law allows the governor to select a site for his papers other than
the Texas State Library -- as long as it is in Texas. But the governor must
first consult with the state's library and archives commission to make
certain any alternative arrangement satisfied the state's open access law.

When Bush became president-elect, however, he simply sent his papers and
records with no consultation whatsoever to his father's presidential library
at Texas A&M University -- known as the most secretive of all the existing
presidential libraries.

The result was, in effect, to federalize the papers and records, placing
them in a legal limbo where no one could have access. Bush Senior's
presidential library is run by the Federal Government -- specifically, the
National Archives And Records Administration (NARA).

But Peggy Rudd, Director and Librarian of the Texas State Library and
Archives Commission, refused to accept Bush's designation of his father's
library as the repository for his papers. Eventually, she procured a ruling
by the Texas attorney general, making Bush's gubernatorial papers subject to
the Texas Public Information Act -- whereupon they were sent to Austin for
processing.

Soon, however, Texas Governor Perry -- Bush's friend and hand-picked
successor -- and the new attorney general found new exceptions in the
state's information law that they claim give them the keys to the relevant
filing cabinets. Good luck to those seeking access.

Now it appears Bush is doing what he did in Texas, on a national level.

Gutting the 1978 Presidential Records Act

This effort began on November 1, 2001, when Bush issued Executive Order
13233. The Executive Order drew loud objections from not only historians
http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/news/20011128/ and archivists
http://www.archivists.org/statements/stephenhorn.asp , but also members of
Congress -- who were highly critical of the Order in hearings. In the end,
however, the Republican leaders quelled the grumbling, and Congress took no
action.

The Executive Order gutted prior law -- specifically, the 1978 Presidential
Records Act. The Order granted all former presidents, as well as any persons
selected by them, an unprecedented authority to invoke executive privilege
to block release of their records. In addition, it granted the power to
invoke executive privilege to present and former vice-presidents as well.

Moreover, it shifts the burden to the requester to establish why he or she
seeks the presidential records. (In contrast, the 1978 law properly put the
burden on the former president who seeks to withhold them.) And Bush's Order
empowers a current president to block release of a former president's
records even when the former president wishes to release them. Finally, it
makes the Department of Justice available to represent, in litigation, any
incumbent or former president seeking to withhold information.

The public interest group Public Citizen filed a complaint
http://www.citizen.org/print_article.cfm?ID=6515 in the U.S. District Court
for the District of Columbia. Both sides have filed for summary judgment. So
far, the court has not ruled.

Bush should lose the suit. A President should not be able to overturn a
statute with an Executive Order -- especially when he is doing so in a
self-interested bid to protect the secrecy of his own records.

Bush's Move To Appoint A New Archivist Again Ignores The Law

Bush's earlier moves to ensure records secrecy bring us to the most recent
such bid: The President's nomination for Archivist of the United States. The
Archivist will head NARA, which administers the 1978 Presidential Records
Act -- so even if Bush loses in his attempt to protect his Executive Order
in court, he may still preserve his records' secrecy if he manages to
appoint a sympathetic enough Archivist.

The Archivist is appointed by the President with the advice and consent of
the Senate. A 1985 law
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/casecode/uscodes/44/chapters/21/sections/section_2103.html
makes NARA an independent agency within the executive branch.

That law says that an "Archivist may be removed from office by the
President" when he "communicate[s] the reasons for any such removal to each
House of the Congress." But President Bush seems to have effectively removed
the incumbent Archivist, John Carlin, without following this procedure.

Carlin was appointed by President Clinton. Carlin had long given the
impression that he planned to remain in his post for at least ten years --
that is, until at least 2005. Yet in December 2003, Carlin resigned --
apparently due to Bush Administration pressure. However, he has said he will
stay until his successor is confirmed, so there is no vacancy.

The law also says that the President must appoint the Archivist "without
regard to political affiliations and solely on the basis of the professional
qualifications required to perform the duties and responsibilities of the
office of Archivist."

Clinton didn't follow this provision: Carlin was a former Democratic
governor of Kansas with no archival experience. Neither has Bush. Allen
Weinstein is hardly a political neutral. Although he is a registered
Democrat, he has close ties with conservative Republicans, and has become
something of a champion of their Cold War views.

Both Presidents ought to be faulted for politicizing our nation's archival
records and our history. And Clinton's wrong does not create a precedent for
Bush to follow.

The U.S. Senate Should Withhold Its Consent

Just as no president could fill a Supreme Court vacancy this close to an
election, similarly, President Bush should not be able to now fill the
Archivist post -- particularly given Bush's record as the most secretive
president this nation has ever had.

Under the rules of the U.S. Senate, any Senator can place a hold on a
nomination. Hopefully, one (or more) will do just that -- insisting that
this post be filled only after the election, and then demanding that the
president comply with the law in filling it.

If Bush should lose, a lame duck president's appointments, obviously, are
easily rejected. But should Bush win reelection, the Senate still must
require the president comply with the law -- and make a non-political
selection of a qualified future Archivist. Not only does our past require
it, so does our future.

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