House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Rep. Dave Camp
challeneged President Barack Obama to turn over documents related to the
Delphi pension scandal, hinting that a claim of executive privilege
could be the White House’s only available legal avenue to avoid
disclosure.
“The White House is withholding documents and has failed to provide a
legitimate reason,” Camp told The Daily Caller exclusively on
Thursday. “The president and his lawyers should either claim executive
privilege and be prepared to defend it for each and every document or
turn over the documents without further delay.”
White House spokesman Eric Schultz would not answer when The Daily
Caller asked if Obama will invoke privilege to avoid releasing the
documents. Congressional investigators hope to determine who in the
administration made decisions that cost 20,000 nonunion Delphi retirees
their pensions during the auto industry bailout. Those workers’
unionized colleagues, meanwhile, saw their pensions preserved and made
whole.
White House counsel Kathryn Ruemmler suggested in an Oct. 12 letter
to Camp that the president could indeed invoke executive privilege as a
route to disregard congressional document requests.
“Your request for all EOP [Executive Office of the President]
communications implicates longstanding and significant executive branch
confidentiality interests,” Ruemmler wrote, “an encroachment upon [sic]
which is unnecessary at this time.”
Obama has used executive privilege to keep documents from Congress
before: This summer, after House oversight committee chair Rep. Darrell
Issa investigated the Operation Fast and Furious scandal for more than a
year, Obama invoked executive privilege to conceal documents about the
failed gunwalking program.
Camp began investigating the Delphi pension issue in August after
TheDC obtained and published emails that showed the Department of
Treasury and the White House’s Auto Task Force drove the pension cutoffs
of the 20,000 nonunion Delphi retirees. The emails also contradict
sworn testimony in which several Obama administration figures have said
the decision to terminate the retirees’ pensions came from the more
independent Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.
Camp’s committee is one of three in the House investigating the
Delphi scandal. The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
and the House Committee on Education and the Workforce are conducting
their own probes.
Treasury has withheld documents from all three committees,
which are now threatening Geithner and the White House with subpoenas
unless the Delphi documents are surrendered to House investigators.
House Speaker John Boehner has publicly thrown his support behind the
investigations.
“Thousands of auto workers in Ohio, Michigan and elsewhere deserve to
know what role the Obama administration played in cutting their
pensions while protecting the president’s union allies,” Boehner said in
a statement Thursday. “A report by the nonpartisan GAO [Government
Accountability Office] made it evident that unions were given
preferential treatment during the taxpayer-funded bailout while nonunion
workers saw their pensions cut by up to 70 percent.”
“And new documents that have been uncovered raise even more
questions. The administration should stop stonewalling and start turning
over all of the information requested by Congress at once. If the White
House is going to boast about its auto bailout, it has an obligation to
explain its involvement in the pension scandal to Delphi workers, their
families, and taxpayers.”
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