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https://talkingpointsmemo.com/dc/dems-grill-zinke-about-native-american-reassignments

Dems Grill Zinke About Native American Reassignments

A routine budget hearing became heated when Democrats challenged Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke about the reassignment of nearly a dozen senior Native American employees. TPM first reported last week that Native Americans made up a full third of the officials pushed out of their positions in a major reshuffling last summer.

“In June, when you reassigned 33 career senior executives, almost half of them were minorities. Specifically, 30 percent were Native Americans,” the Appropriations subcommittee’s top Democrat, Rep. Betty McCollum (D-MN), charged in her opening statement, citing TPM’s reporting. “This apparent discrimination is just wrong, and I am disturbed by reports that you have said repeatedly that you believe diversity isn’t important in the Interior Department.”

“A Department that serves the American public, that tells the story of America, should reflect its diversity and should never marginalize minorities,” she added. “Mr. Secretary, you must do better.”

Before beginning his prepared testimony, Zinke hit back.

“The openings were false and misleading and blatantly untruthful,” Zinke said, referring to members opening statements. He did not provide additional detail.

The reassignment of Native Americans was far out of proportion to their numbers at DOI, where they make up less than 10 percent of the workforce. A list of the 33 reassigned workers was released after one of them filed a Freedom of Information Act request. Some of the officials are challenging their ouster.

Investigations by the DOI’s Inspector General and the Government Accountability Office into Zinke’s disproportionate targeting of minority employees are ongoing.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/dc/ig...icans-and-climate-scientists-possibly-illegal

IG: Zinke’s Reassignment Of Native Americans And Climate Scientists Possibly Illegal

The reassignment of dozens of senior career Interior Department (DOI) officials last year may have violated federal law, a damning internal report released Wednesday found. But investigators with the DOI Inspector General’s office said they were unable to say definitively because the agency failed to properly document their reasons for ousting the employees.

“Absent documentation, we could not independently determine whether or not the ERB complied with the Federal legal requirements,” the report, referring to a board of made up of Trump administration appointees at the agency. The report did determine, however, that this board did not properly consider the officials’ qualifications, time in office, or other valid criteria when selecting them to be forced out of their jobs.


Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has for several months been under fire for the reassignments, which Democrats say may have discriminated against department employees based on their political ideology or their race. Though the IG report does not mention it, a review by TPM found that a full third of those reassigned are Native American — a potential violation of both federal anti-discrimination laws and the agency’s own Indian Preference rules.

In the report, Deputy Inspector General Mary Kendall describes a haphazard process used to select senior executive service (SES) officials for reassignment.

“The Executive Resources Board did not gather the information needed to make informed decisions about the reassignments, nor did it effectively communicate with the SES members or with most managers affected by the reassignments,” she said, noting that board is supposed to be made up of a mix of non-partisan career officials and political appointees, but under Zinke it was comprised solely of Trump administration picks.

“One ERB member told us that the ERB members only discussed senior executives who they knew or had experience with and that there was not much thought or discussion given to reassigning senior executives they did not know,” the report continues. “When we asked the ERB members who in the Department leadership ordered the reassignment of senior executives, no one could provide an answer.”

As a result of this chaotic process and the lack of information about the moves, the report continues, more than half of the impacted officials “questioned whether these reassignments were political or punitive, based on a prior conflict with DOI leadership, or on the senior executive’s nearness to retirement. Many executives speculated that multiple reasons applied or believed their reassignment may have been related to their prior work assignments, including climate change, energy, or conservation.”

The most high profile of the ousted officials, climate scientist Joel Clement, said in a statement to TPM that he is “stunned by the level of incompetence that this report describes.”

“It’s remarkable that the political staff at Interior would be so blithe, thoughtless, and careless during a time of intense scrutiny,” he said. “It begs the question, what did they have to hide?”

The Interior Department did not respond to TPM’s inquiry about the IG’s findings.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/michael-cohen-raid-access-hollywood-tape

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/11/us/politics/michael-cohen-trump-access-hollywood.html

NYT: FBI Sought Records On ‘Access Hollywood’ Tape In Cohen Raid

During Monday’s raids of Michael Cohen’s home, hotel room, and office, FBI agents were looking for records related to the “Access Hollywood” tape released a month before the 2016 election, the New York Times reported Wednesday, citing people who had been briefed on the search warrant.

It’s not clear what information Cohen, President Donald Trump’s longtime personal attorney and fixer, would have on the tape, which featured Trump making vulgar comments about groping women.

The FBI was also looking for evidence that Cohen tried to suppress damaging information about Trump during the 2o16 campaign, the Times reported.

Reports on Tuesday indicated that the FBI was looking for documents related to the payment to porn actress Stormy Daniels, the hush agreement between a media company and Playboy model Karen McDougal, and Cohen’s taxi medallion business. Cohen paid Daniels $130,000 shortly before the 2016 election when she signed an agreement barring her from talking about her alleged affair with Trump. The publisher of the National Enquirer paid McDougal for the rights to her story of an alleged affair with Trump, also right before the election.

Both women recently filed lawsuits over the deals.

donald_trump_ebola_0.jpg
 
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