Leahy Asks Greater White House
Cooperation
On Reagan Library Documents
August 9, 2005
Sen. Patrick Leahy
(D-Vt., ranking member, Senate Judiciary Committee) late Tuesday
sent a letter to President Bush requesting greater White House
cooperation in supplying documents the White House already has
agreed to provide to the panel. Leahy, writing on behalf of all
eight Democratic members of the committee, noted that White House
cooperation is essential to the Senate Judiciary Committee’s
preparation for the confirmation hearings that will begin Sept. 6.
Leahy’s letter
follows up a White House letter delivered last Friday night which
responds to the Judiciary Democrats’ request for prioritizing
documents from the Reagan Library. The Friday White House letter
reports that Reagan Library officials are prioritizing files on the
basis of highest usefulness to the Judiciary Committee before
forwarding them to the White House, but the letter does not indicate
that the White House is doing the same after its file-by-file
reviews are completed. The new Leahy letter asks that the White
House, like the Reagan Library, also focus on priority documents
first. Leahy further asks that documents, once White House reviews
are finished, be provided to the committee on a rolling basis to
speed the process. Leahy noted that some of these documents have
been selectively provided to the press but not yet to the Judiciary
Committee. Leahy, on behalf of the committee’s Democratic members,
also asks the White House for a progress report and timetable on its
handling of the Reagan Library documents.
The text of the
letter follows:
[CONTACT: David
Carle, 202-224-3693]
# # #
# #
August 9, 2005
President George W. Bush
The White House
Washington, D.C. 20500
Dear Mr. President:
I write on behalf of
Democratic Members of the Committee on the Judiciary to thank you
for your response last Friday to our July 26, 2005, letter. Our
letter had requested that the White House prioritize and provide on
a rolling basis selected files relating to the work of John G.
Roberts, Jr., in the Department of Justice and in the Office of
White House Counsel. I also write to inquire about numerous pending
questions from our earlier correspondence that were not answered in
your letter last Friday. While the information we received from
your Office of Legislative Affairs was useful, it did not address
many of our questions about the handling, processing, and delivery
of those documents to the Committee in time for Judge Roberts’s
confirmation hearing. Timely cooperation from the Administration is
essential to the Committee’s preparations for the upcoming hearings.
We understand that the
process of reviewing the approximately 50,000 pages of relevant
papers housed in the Reagan Library in Simi Valley, California, is
well underway. Published reports state that the head of the Library
has estimated that such a review would take three weeks, and the
National Archive’s website estimates the documents will be made
public by mid-August. Nonetheless, on August 5, 2005, it was
reported in the Washington Post
that the White House already has possession of some of those
“Reagan-era” documents, and that someone in the White House had
provided at least two of them to the newspaper.
In our previous letter, we
asked that certain of the files relating to Judge Roberts in the
Reagan Library be processed first, because they were of the greatest
interest to us and possibly are the most relevant to the
confirmation process. While your letter of last Friday indicates
that you have requested that the Reagan Library prioritize the files
in which we are particularly interested, we would appreciate a
similar assurance that the White House itself will do the same. We
also asked that the documents be produced to us on a rolling basis,
as various documents have already been reviewed as required by the
Presidential Records Act. With the
Washington Post’s
disclosure that the White House is in possession of some of these
documents, it appears that this request has also been ignored or
rejected.
We renew those requests
and also request a progress report on the work of reviewing the
documents in general and the priority files in particular, and a
timetable for giving us the priority documents, as well as the
remainder of the documents. We certainly believe that making the
documents available to the Senate Judiciary Committee in small
batches as they are processed will be easier for all those involved
in reviewing the documents than having to copy, read, and analyze
50,000 or more documents at once. We recognize that the White House
must complete its own review after receiving documents from the
Reagan Library or the National Archives, but it is clear from press
reports that such a review has already begun. We are especially
concerned that upon reviewing these documents someone in the White
House provided them to the press but not to the Committee; if there
are any other such documents we should receive them immediately.
Senator Kennedy and
Senator Schumer separately wrote to you late last week with their
concern that the documents will not be made available to us in time
for a meaningful review before the hearing begins on September 6th.
We all share that concern and hope that with your cooperation the
Senate Judiciary Committee can begin reviewing those documents that
have been processed, and any other documents that have been provided
to the press, as they become available.
Respectfully,
PATRICK LEAHY
Ranking Democratic Member
cc: Andrew H. Card, Jr.