The Miami Herald reports:
Vice President Dick Cheney and congressional Democrats are sparring over the vice president's refusal to comply with a 2003 presidential executive order that requires all agencies and the executive branch to protect classified material.
The skirmish is the latest in a long battle between Congress and the Bush White House -- particularly Cheney's office -- over the administration's campaign to expand the powers of the executive branch and increase the amount of information labeled as classified.
In a letter to Cheney on Thursday, House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Henry Waxman, D-Calif., questioned ''both the legality and wisdom'' of the vice president claiming an exemption from the order, noting recent controversies involving members of Cheney's staff and classified information.
Former Cheney Chief of Staff I. Lewis ''Scooter'' Libby was convicted in March of perjury and obstruction of justice in connection with a federal investigation into the identification, in a leak to the media, of CIA undercover operative Valerie Plame.
In May 2006, Leandro Aragoncillo, an aide in the vice president's office, admitted in federal court that he stole classified U.S. intelligence information and passed it on to officials plotting a coup in the Philippines.
`SECURITY BREACHES'
''This record does not inspire confidence in how your office handles the nation's most sensitive security information,'' Waxman wrote. ``Indeed, it would appear particularly irresponsible to give an office with your history of security breaches an exemption from the safeguards that apply to all other executive branch officials.''
Cheney's office says it is exempt from Bush's executive order because it's not an entity within the executive branch. The order, issued in March 2003, directed all agencies and executive branch offices to report on their classified and nonclassified files to the National Archives and Records Administration.
Cheney says his office is ''unique'' because it has dual responsibilities in the executive branch and legislative branches. In addition to serving as vice president, Cheney is president of the U.S. Senate.
National Archives officials and Waxman disagree.
They say Cheney and his staff fall under the executive order because of their executive branch business. The Archive's Information Security Oversight Office has been trying to get Cheney to comply with the order since it was denied access to the vice president's office for a routine inspection in 2004.
COMPLIANCE SOUGHT
'According to a letter that the National Archives sent to your staff in June 2006, you asserted that the Office of the Vice President is not an `entity within the executive branch,' and hence is not subject to presidential executive orders,'' Waxman wrote. ``To my knowledge, this was the first time in the nearly 30-year history of the Information Security Oversight Office that a request for access to conduct a security inspection was denied by a White House office.''
Archives officials fired off letters to Cheney's office in June and August 2006 seeking compliance to Bush's order but to no avail.
In January 2007, they wrote to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales in hopes of getting Cheney to comply.
Gonzales has not responded to the letter, according to Waxman's office. Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd told McClatchy that the matter is under review.
Cheney's refusal has a familiar ring to it:
Lest anyone forget, Cheney (and Donald Rumsfeld) got his start in Nixon's White House.
The founders of the nation counted on men of good will not to push the ambiguity in the Constitution, which was necessary in order to have the three co-equal branches of government of, by and for all equal people. The founders did not anticipate the likes of a Richard M. Nixon and crowd, a group that has spent more than thirty years brooding and plotting to erode the checks and balances within the Constitution.
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