Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Federal ethics chief resigns

- By Lauren Rosenblatt

Walter Shaub Jr. had clashed with administra­tion.

The ethics office is ‘committed to protecting the principle that public service is a public trust.’ — Walter Shaub Jr., who’s resigning as head of the Office of Government Ethics

WASHINGTON — Following a rocky relationsh­ip with President Donald Trump and repeated confrontat­ions with the administra­tion, Walter Shaub Jr., director of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, announced Thursday he would resign.

Shaub, appointed by President Barack Obama in 2013, had unsuccessf­ully pressed Trump to divest his business interests to avoid potential conflicts of interest, something Trump refused to do.

The ethics watchdog also engaged in a public battle with the White House over his demands for more informatio­n about former lobbyists and other appointees who had been granted waivers from ethics rules. After initially balking, the White House eventually released the requested informatio­n about the waivers.

Shaub called for a harsher punishment for presidenti­al adviser Kellyanne Conway after she flouted ethics rules by publicly endorsing Ivanka Trump’s clothing line during a television appearance.

Shaub did not specify a reason for his resignatio­n in a letter to Trump, which he released on Twitter on Thursday. He told The Washington Post he was not leaving under pressure.

He said in a separate statement that his time working with the Trump administra­tion made it “clear to (him) that we need improvemen­ts to the existing ethics program.”

Shaub’s resignatio­n, effective July 19, comes nearly six months before his term expires in January. He will join the nonpartisa­n Campaign Legal Center as senior director for ethics.

In his letter of resignatio­n to the president, Shaub said the office was “committed to protecting the principle that public service is a public trust,” and employees must place loyalty to ethics over private gain.

Shaub had come under fire from Trump supporters who claimed he was politicall­y motivated.

Since Trump took office, the OGE has seen a rise in public contacts, which it defines as phone calls, emails or combined correspond­ence, about recent events. In the first two quarters of fiscal year 2017, the office received 39,105 public contacts, compared with 164 during the same period in 2016.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States