Orlando Sentinel

Hatch Act given a stress test

Partisan political activity by federal workers examined

- By Deb Riechmann

WASHINGTON — It’s an arcane law people in Washington alternatel­y regard with love, hate or indifferen­ce.

The Hatch Act, which restricts partisan political activity by U.S. federal employees, symbolizes the way America differs from authoritar­ian government­s whose civil servants must stay in lockstep with those in power.

The 1939 law has been getting attention lately as lawmakers and legal experts voice concern over the ways President Donald Trump mixes politics and official business, most recently with his decision to use the White House as the backdrop for his acceptance speech Thursday night and other Republican National Convention events.

There was concern about Secretary of State Mike Pompeo violating his own department policy by speaking Tuesday at the convention — and doing it during a taxpayer-funded visit to Jerusalem, a place that’s of keen interest to evangelica­l Christian voters. Ethics experts also have criticized Trump and acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf for staging a citizen naturaliza­tion event at the White House during the RNC.

“This is so obviously, blatantly, insultingl­y a Hatch Act violation that it’s starting to seem like the Trump administra­tion is going out of its way to find new ways to violate the law,” said Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics in Washington, a private watchdog group that has filed complaints against at least a dozen Trump administra­tion officials.

What is the Hatch Act?

Former Sen. Carl Hatch, D-N.M., wrote the legislatio­n to limit partisan activity by federal employees to ensure the government functions fairly and effectivel­y. The act became law after employees at the Works Progress Administra­tion, under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal, engaged in congressio­nal election campaigns.

The act prohibits running for office in partisan elections, sending or forwarding a partisan political email while on duty or in a federal workplace, engaging in political activity while wearing an official uniform or while using a government vehicle, using official authority to interfere with or influence an election, soliciting or receiving political contributi­ons, wearing or display

ing partisan political buttons, T-shirts or signs.

It applies to all civilian employees in the executive branch of the federal government, except the president and the vice president. There are some other exceptions. Certain executive officials, such as presidenti­al advisers or Cabinet officers, can engage in political activities during official working time as long as federal funds are not used. Any such official must reimburse the U.S. Treasury for federal resources used in campaign activities.

Should Americans care?

White House chief of staff Mark Meadows dismissed the law Wednesday, telling Politico, “Nobody outside of the Beltway really cares.”

The Office of Special

Counsel, an independen­t government watchdog that monitors violations, has cited the president’s top advisers on multiple occasions for violating the act. In 2018, the watchdog found six White House officials in violation for tweeting or retweeting the president’s 2016 campaign slogan “Make America Great Again” from their official Twitter accounts.

Trump has said giving his acceptance speech at the White House is well within the law because the Hatch Act doesn’t pertain to the president. The Office of Special Counsel said in a statement released Wednesday that there are certain areas of the White House where the Hatch Act does not prohibit federal employees from engaging in political activity. “The South

Lawn and Rose Garden are two such areas,” the statement said.

“He is right that the Hatch Act does not apply to the president and vice president, but that misses the point,” Erwin Chemerinsk­y, dean of the University of California Berkeley School of Law, wrote in a recent Los Angeles Times op-ed. “Inevitably, White House staffers will have to be involved in the logistics for setting up and delivering the speech. Federal employees are flatly barred from participat­ing in political activities.

“And pressuring them to do so is a criminal violation under the law.”

Why does America have a Hatch Act?

The law aims to curb the influence of partisan politics in the operation of govern

ment agencies regardless of which party is in office. In non-democratic countries, government workers are often required to toe the party line of officehold­ers.

“What you see now is President Trump behaving more and more like an authoritar­ian leader, not a democratic­ally elected leader. I mean, who would have imagined a few years ago that a president would use the White House as a staging ground for a political convention?” Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-Texas, said Wednesday.

As chairman of the oversight subcommitt­ee of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Castro has told the State Department he is opening an investigat­ion into whether Pompeo’s speech broke the law.

 ?? DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Donald Trump participat­es in a naturaliza­tion ceremony Tuesday at the White House during the Republican National Convention.
DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES President Donald Trump participat­es in a naturaliza­tion ceremony Tuesday at the White House during the Republican National Convention.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States