Green Corner: For Your Consideration: End Secrecy At Trump Administration's EPA
If a new rule by President Donald Trump's industry-friendly EPA stays in effect, the public's ability to shine a light on the Trump administration's backdoor dealings with Big Oil and polluters could remain in the dark. Climate deniers and industry insiders packed into the EPA are fighting to keep public records secret in order to gut environmental protections and enrich the industries that are destroying communities and exacerbating the climate crisis.
New bipartisan legislation in the Senate called the Open and Responsive Government Act of 2019, S. 2220, would safeguard Freedom of Information Act requests and ensure the public’s right to information. We must build public support for this legislation to protect our right to know and expose the corruption in the Trump administration.
Thanks in part to intrepid journalists and public interest organizations armed with FOIA requests, we know that President Trump has packed his administration with climate deniers and oil lobbyists, handed public lands over to extractive industries, scrubbed climate information from public websites, and is waging a war on science. In fact, FOIA requests played a significant role in the downfall of former disgraced EPA administrator Scott Pruitt. It’s FOIA requests that show the ongoing (and illegal) connection between Assistant Secretary of the Interior Doug Domenech and the Koch-funded Texas Public Policy Foundation.
But President Trump's new rule, signed by Andrew Wheeler, current EPA Administrator (and don’t ever forget that he was a coal lobbyist), without any public input, would allow a wide range of political appointees at the agency – many of whom are industry insiders – to deny requests for public information. The rule would let them keep their secret deals with the fossil fuel industry away from public scrutiny.
The rule comes on the heels of a Supreme Court decision that overturned more than 40 years of FOIA precedent to rule in favor of corporate secrecy over the public’s right to know. This legislation seeks to undo that decision as well.
With corporate shills filling the Trump administration and Supreme Court, the Open and Responsive Government Act will start to put the public's interest ahead of corporate interests.
Join us and demand that the Senate defends our right to know what the Trump administration is up to and pass this critical legislation.