EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Obama and Transparency: Judge for Yourself
(updated below)
"My Administration is committed to creating an unprecedented level of openness in Government" -- Barack Obama, January 28, 2009
Promising "a new era of openness in our country," President Obama [said]: "Transparency and the rule of law will be the touchstones of this presidency" -- CNN, January 21, 2009
"A democracy requires accountability, and accountability requires transparency. As Justice Louis Brandeis wrote, 'sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants.' In our democracy, the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), which encourages accountability through transparency, is the most prominent expression of a profound national commitment to ensuring an open Government. At the heart of that commitment is the idea that accountability is in the interest of the Government and the citizenry alike. . . .
All agencies should adopt a presumption in favor of disclosure, in order to renew their commitment to the principles embodied in FOIA, and to usher in a new era of open Government" -- Barack Obama, January 21, 2009
* * * * *
Has Obama fulfilled those pledges and lived up to those commitments -- even remotely? Just examine the facts and judge for yourself:
In a closely watched case involving rendition and torture [Mohamed v. Jeppesen Data], a lawyer for the Obama administration seemed to surprise a panel of federal appeals judges on Monday by pressing ahead with an argument for preserving state secrets originally developed by the Bush administration.
The Obama administration, siding with former President George W. Bush, is trying to kill a lawsuit that seeks to recover what could be millions of missing White House e-mails.
February 27, Associated Press:
The Obama administration has lost its argument that a potential threat to national security should stop a lawsuit challenging the government's warrantless wiretapping program. . . . The Obama administration, like the Bush administration before it, claimed national security would be compromised if a lawsuit brought by the Oregon chapter of the charity, Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation, was allowed to proceed.
The Obama Administration still wants to keep its secrets. Yesterday, the Justice Department [in a case brought against Bush officials for illegal spying] embraced the argument that the state secrets privilege . . . should shut down any litigation against the National Security Agency for its arguably illegal warrantless surveillance program.
A federal appeals court ruled Tuesday that a lawsuit brought by five men who say they were tortured as part of the Central Intelligence Agency's "extraordinary rendition" program could proceed, dealing a blow to efforts by both the Bush and Obama administrations to claim sweeping executive secrecy powers.
The Obama administration says it may curtail Anglo-American intelligence sharing if the British High Court discloses new details of the treatment of a former Guantanamo detainee. . . . In February, the British Foreign Office claimed that the U.S. government had threatened to reduce intelligence cooperation if details of the interrogations and treatment of Mr. Mohamed were disclosed.
President Obama yesterday chose secrecy over disclosure, saying he will seek to block the court-ordered release of photographs depicting the abuse of detainees held by U.S. authorities abroad.
May 22, San Francisco Chronicle:
A federal judge on Friday threatened to severely sanction the Obama Administration for withholding a top secret document he ordered given to lawyers suing the government over its warrantless wiretapping program. . . . The National Security Agency has also refused the judge's previous orders to provide security clearances to two of the charity's lawyers so they can view the top secret document.
June 1, Washington Post Editorial page:
The [Graham-Lieberman] measure, supported by the White House and passed May 21 as an attachment to a Senate funding bill, would put beyond the reach of FOIA any photographs taken between Sept. 11, 2001, and Jan. 22, 2009 . . . [W]hat makes the administration's support for the photographic records act so regrettable [is that in] taking a step aimed at protecting the country's service members, Mr. Obama runs the risk of taking two steps back in his quest for more open government.
The Obama administration objected yesterday to the release of certain Bush-era documents that detail the videotaped interrogations of CIA detainees at secret prisons, arguing to a federal judge that doing so would endanger national security and benefit al-Qaeda's recruitment efforts. In an affidavit, CIA Director Leon E. Panetta defended the classification of records describing the contents of the 92 videotapes, their destruction by the CIA in 2005 and what he called "sensitive operational information" about the interrogations.
The Obama administration has decided to keep secret the locations of nearly four dozen coal ash storage sites that pose a threat to people living nearby. The Environmental Protection Agency classified the 44 sites as potential hazards to communities while investigating storage of coal ash waste after a spill at a Tennessee power plant in December.
Defense Department officials are debating whether to ignore an earlier promise and squelch the release of an investigation into a U.S. airstrike last month, out of fear that its findings would further enrage the Afghan public, Pentagon officials told McClatchy Monday.
After being briefed today on President Obama's firing last week of Gerald Walpin, Inspector General of the Corporation for National and Community Service, Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., said the president did not abide by the same law that he co-sponsored - and she wrote - about firing Inspectors General. . . . "The legislation which was passed last year requires that the president give a reason for the removal," [McCaskill said]. McCaskill, a key Obama ally, said that the president's stated reason for the termination, "Loss of confidence' is not a sufficient reason."
President Obama has embraced Bush administration justifications for denying public access to White House visitor logs even as advisers say they are reviewing the policy of keeping secret the official record of comings and goings.
Balanced against all of that, Obama complied with a court order directing the release of Bush-era OLC memos on torture; issued an Executive Order creating additional procedures before executive secrecy under FOIA could be asserted; and ordered his agency heads to interpret FOIA with a "presumption" in favor of disclosure. It should also be noted that -- as Think Progress documented yesterday -- Obama's position in denying access to visitor logs is a direct violation of his statements about the Bush administration's practices in doing the same, and the same is true for his use of the Bush-era version of the state secrets theory.
Finally, it's worth emphasizing that the above excerpts pertain only to transparency issues. None of this has anything to do with what The New York Times in May -- referring to Obama's Bush-replicating policies on detention, rendition, denial of habeas rights, military commission and the like -- described as "how he has backtracked, in substantial if often nuanced ways, from the approach to national security that he preached as a candidate, and even from his first days in the Oval Office." No matter how you look at it, this is quite a record.
* * * * *
I'll be on Democracy Now with Amy Goodman this morning at roughly 8:30 a.m. EST to talk about Obama and issues of transparency and secrecy. Live video feed is here.
UPDATE: On Twitter, Sen. Claire McCaskill says the Obama administration has now provided additional information about its reasons for firing the Inspector General of the Corporation for National and Community Service and that the information provided now fulfills Obama's legal obligations. So that is one case where pressure from one of Obama's closest Senate allies compelled additional disclosure.
- Posted in
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


7 Comments so far
Show AllNicely stated.
I volunteer 5 hours a week at my local Green Party Office advancing the aim to build membership and interest in the Party.
I invite anyone else to do the same.
In the middle ages all boats were made of wood. There was a belief in culture that followed action: wood floats, therefore, we cannot contemplate anything else.
It turns out that the law of floatation is rather about how much water is being displaced and has nothing whatsoever to do with the material being used for boat construction.
Methinks a metaphor for the current 'belief' that we only have one option in politics, and that option is the duopoly.
In other words, the law of floatation was not discovered by contemplating the sinking of things.
We do in fact have a choice.
People keep telling me, "Mordechai, there's a knife in your back." I reach behind me and sure enough there is. I pull it out but then discover there's another and another and another.
There are some who realized this outcome as a result of Obama's voting record before he was elected. He was never a progressive (and by progressive I mean putting human rights ahead of corporate profits).
But most overlooked his voting record, and his words, and hoped that he would act in a honorable way that represented a break from that past.
Hope is the opiate of the masses.
Great article, as usual from Greenwald, but one item doesn't really belong among the others: the firing of Gerald Walpin. Walpin was a corrupt Bush official who, in an effort to influence the Sacramento mayoral election, was violating Justice Department guidelines in releasing inflammatory allegations about a charity connected to one of the candidates. The Bush-appointed U.S. Attorney in Sacramento then had to knock down the allegations as overblown and unwarranted. The same Bush U.S. Attorney filed the complaint that led to Walpin's firing. Obama may not have sufficiently explained this to congress, but the facts are available for anyone who cares to look.
At the White House website, the promise of "transparency" is atop the comment box. I just filled that box, calling his "efforts" a lie, which makes him a liar, by using some of the info show by Greenwald. I also accused Obama of being, like Bush, a killer, war criminal, and planetary public enemy #1. I ended with the observation that Obama is no more than Bush in black face.
Others need to do the same, at least with regard to calling him what he is on transparency--a liar. The only way the staffers who read the comments will tell him he's a liar is if many folks post that message.
As I've stated before, it's not enough to just comment here; comments must be made there. And if you're afraid to make comments there, then why do you make them here?
what did they show him when he got to washington to make him change so completely? or was he just lying all along? let's have a vote.
I believe we all will find at the end of the day Obama will be far worse than Bush and Cheney. These two set in rapid motion the destruction of the Constitution and taking govt. completely out of the hands of us Americans and citizens. Obama is going to ride that horse to the finish line, adding as he goes along more power, more secrecy, less accountability, and ultimately total erosion of our rights and way of life. He has protected the wealthy and those who brought our country (And the world economies) to its knees and I see no change in his agenda. He will continue to fund the greedy elites, the MIC, and crush the common man who built this country.