Obama to Bush: I Can Release Your Records. Don't Like It? Sue.

 
 
On his first day in office, President Obama put former president Bush on 
notice. His administration just released an executive order that will make it 
difficult for Bush to shield his White House records--and those of former Vice 
President Dick Cheney--from public scrutiny by invoking the doctrine of 
executive privilege. Shortly after taking office, Bush handed down his own 
executive order, amending the Presidential Records Act to give current and past 
presidents, along with their heirs, veto power over the release of presidential 
records, which are considered the property of the American people. 
 
"[Obama]'s putting former presidents on notice that if you want to continue a 
claim of executive privilege that [Obama] doesn't think is well-placed, you're 
going to have to go to court," says Anne Weismann, the chief counsel for 
Citizens for Ethics and Responsibility in Washington (CREW).
 
During the campaign, Obama promised to "nullify attempts to make the timely 
release of presidential records more difficult." (A transition spokesperson 
promised Mother Jones essentially the same thing when we asked a few weeks 
ago.) That was a reference to former president Bush's infamous Executive Order 
13233, which gave current and former presidents and vice presidents, along with 
their heirs, unprecedented authority to block the disclosure of White House 
records. But Obama's taken his campaign promise a step further. While revoking 
13233, Obama has also put forth a far stricter interpretation of executive 
privilege:
[T]he Executive Order on Presidential Records brings those principles [of 
openness and transparency] to presidential records by giving the American 
people greater access to these historic documents. This order ends the practice 
of having others besides the President assert executive privilege for records 
after an administration ends. Now, only the President will have that power, 
limiting its potential for abuse. And the order also requires the Attorney 
General and the White House Counsel to review claims of executive privilege 
about covered records to make sure those claims are fully warranted by the 
Constitution.
Weismann explains:
[Obama]'s basically saying if there's a dispute, and a former president thinks 
something should be covered by executive privilege and Obama doesn't agree, 
then Obama would direct the Archivist to release it [despite the former 
president's claim of privilege]. The only option a former President would have 
at that point would be to go to court and sue. [Obama]'s set up a process to 
review these claims which requires the Attorney General and White House Counsel 
to agree that these claims should be invoked, which indicates that it won't be 
either casually invoked or casually defended.
In Obama's remarks on Wednesday morning, he said that, "Going forward, anytime 
the American people want to know something that I or a former President wants 
to withhold, we will have to consult with the Attorney General and the White 
House Counsel, whose business it is to ensure compliance with the rule of law. 
Information will not be withheld just because I say so. It will be withheld 
because a separate authority believes my request is well grounded in the 
Constitution." The effect of that particular phrase is enormous, as emphasized 
by the response of a reader over at Talking Points Memo who works for the 
Justice Department. "That highlighted phrase has signaled a significant 
discussion around these parts." You can be certain that Obama's early moves to 
promote government transparency and accountability will be the subject of 
discussion and debate for a long time to come.
 
Photo by flickr user Barack Obama used under a Creative Commons license.




http://www.motherjones.com/mojoblog/archives/2009/01/11919_executive_order_13233_revoked_obama_bush_sue_me.html
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