Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

White House defends its approach to transparen­cy

- By Julie Pace

WASHINGTON — The White House defended its commitment to transparen­cy Monday amid criticism of its decision to keep visitors’ records secret and new calls for President Donald Trump to release his federal tax returns.

Government watchdog groups argue Trump is preventing the public from learning basic details about his financial ties and blocking informatio­n about the groups and individual­s that are trying to influence the White House. The Obama administra­tion released 6 million White House visitor records over eight years.

On Monday, White House spokesman Sean Spicer downplayed those disclosure­s because national security and law enforcemen­t reasons were used to exclude certain visits — despite the fact that the Trump White House has used national security and privacy concerns to justify keeping all visitor informatio­n under wraps.

Spicer said the Obama White House approach amounted to “faux” transparen­cy.

“It’s not really being transparen­t when you scrub out the names of the people that you don’t want anyone to know were here,” Spicer said.

The Obama administra­tion initially fought attempts by Congress and conservati­ve and liberal groups to obtain visitor records. But after being sued, it voluntaril­y began disclosing the logs in December 2009, posting records every three to four months. It continued to release the records even though a federal appeals court ruled in 2013 that the logs can be withheld under presidenti­al executive privilege.

Trump has long faced questions about secrecy and transparen­cy given his refusal to release his federal tax returns, a decision that broke decades of tradition for both presidents and presidenti­al candidates. White House aides have also provided few details about Trump’s activities and meetings during his weekend trips to Florida.

Thousands of protesters marched across the country Saturday demanding anew that Trump release his tax returns. But the protests did little to change Trump’s thinking: Spicer maintained that Trump was unable to make the informatio­n public because he is under audit, despite the fact that tax experts say an audit would not prevent him from releasing his taxes.

Asked whether Trump is simply never going to release his taxes, Spicer said, “We’ll have to get back to you on that.”

The White House defended Trump’s overall approach to transparen­cy, noting that the president often opens portions of his meetings with business executives and other visitors to journalist­s. He also takes questions from reporters on a fairly regular basis, including during news conference­s with visiting foreign leaders.

“We bring people in, we release participan­t lists, we give press the opportunit­y to come into the room, see everybody who’s there, hear part of the discussion,” Spicer said.

However, the White House has been tight-lipped about Trump’s activities when he travels to his properties in Florida — his Mar-a-Lago resort and a nearby private golf club. Aides rarely confirm when the president is golfing, even when photos of him on the course pop up on social media.

During his recent Easter visit to Florida, the president spent two days at Trump Internatio­nal Golf Course. The White House provided no informatio­n about his activities, though CNN obtained images of the president golfing.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/GETTY-AFP ?? White House spokesman Sean Spicer called the Obama administra­tion’s visitor logs “faux” transparen­cy.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/GETTY-AFP White House spokesman Sean Spicer called the Obama administra­tion’s visitor logs “faux” transparen­cy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States