Republicans in Congress objected Thursday to the Homeland Security Department's now-rescinded practice of requiring secretive reviews by political advisers of hundreds of requests for government files under the Freedom of Information Act. The chairman of a House oversight committee said the process 'reeks of a Nixonian enemies list' and was unacceptable.
The senior official in charge of submitting files for the reviews, Mary Ellen Callahan, acknowledged there had been 'management challenges' in the program and said the political scrutiny 'at times took longer than anticipated.' But Callahan deflected suggestions by Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., that the process injected political considerations into decisions about federal records the government was turning over to journalists, watchdog groups or even members of Congress.
This week, Callahan reduced the period for political advisers to review government files to one business day. But the inspector general said even the new, speedier process 'is not required by FOIA and seems inconsistent' with the Obama administration's instructions prohibiting unnecessary bureaucratic hurdles under the Freedom of Information Act.
Under the previous system in place, no files could be released to reporters, watchdog groups or even members of Congress without specific approval by Napolitano's political advisers. The inspector general called it 'unprecedented involvement in the FOIA process.'