GOP argues whistleblower's name must be public

Source: The Hill | November 2, 2019 | Scott Wong and Mike Lillis

As the evidence mounts of a quid pro quo in President Trump’s dealings with Ukraine, the president’s allies in Congress are increasingly hopeful they’ll find exoneration in a singular figure: the government whistleblower they’re fighting to expose.

The clash over the whistleblower’s identity — and that person’s right to anonymity — has emerged as a frontline battle in the partisan war over the Trump impeachment inquiry.

Republicans on Capitol Hill contend that knowing the whistleblower’s identity is vital to the process, granting Trump the right to face his accuser — and learn of any political biases the figure might have. They are effectively waging a whisper campaign about the identity of the anonymous figure who filed the complaint triggering the inquiry launched just six weeks ago.

Democrats counter that the GOP efforts to out the whistleblower violate federal law and are a dangerous game that could jeopardize the safety of the individual.

……..

The foreign service officials who have testified privately in support of the whistleblower’s charges have eroded GOP arguments that the initial account is unreliable because it was learned secondhand, say Democrats, who contend the whistleblower’s testimony is now superfluous to their investigation.

………

The whistleblower debate is likely to escalate in the coming weeks, when the process will shift from closed-door depositions to wide-open hearings.

The Hill is not naming the individual being targeted by Republicans. It is also typically the policy of The Associated Press and other major news outlets not to reveal the identity of whistleblowers, who enjoy federal protections against retribution.

The whistleblower’s attorneys, Andrew Bakaj and Mark Zaid, said in a statement they would “neither confirm nor deny” the identity of their client. 

Both federal whistleblower laws and the Privacy Act of 1974 protect the individual’s anonymity within the executive branch, Zaid said.

However, nothing legally prohibits members of Congress, or the president himself, from revealing a whistleblower’s identity unless the individual is a covert agent.

That means it is possible lawmakers could choose to make the whistleblower’s name public, if they choose to do so.

“The whistleblower statute never required for anonymity,” said Meadows, who has been attending the closed-door impeachment depositions. 

Meadows, Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and other top Trump allies have stated that there is only one member of Congress who knows the identity of the whistleblower: Schiff, one of three Democratic chairmen leading the impeachment inquiry into Trump. That’s because the whistleblower, after contacting the CIA’s legal counsel, had voiced his concerns to a member of Schiff’s staff on the Intelligence panel. Both contacts were made before the whistleblower filed his official complaint on Aug. 12.

GOP lawmakers have been asking questions in the closed-door impeachment depositions that have been interpreted by Democrats as trying to unmask the whistleblower, a development first reported by The Washington Post and confirmed by The Hill.

The whistleblower’s attorneys, Bakaj and Zaid, have blasted members of Congress and the media who are trying to reveal the individual, arguing that even floating the name of someone suspected of being the whistleblower could result in “great physical danger” for that person and his or her family.

The attorneys pointed to recent comments by Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), chairman and founder of the Senate Whistleblower Caucus, who said whistleblowers “ought to be heard out and protected.”

“It is beyond the pale of irresponsibility for a Member of Congress to vindictively and with partisan intent further promote conspiracy theories that could, especially in this day and age, lead to the physical harm of any individual,” Zaid said in an email to The Hill. 

Viewing 1 post (of 1 total)
Viewing 1 post (of 1 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic.