HUD Secretary Ben Carson is one of the Cabinet secretaries whose mixed travel the group is looking into.

HUD Secretary Ben Carson is one of the Cabinet secretaries whose mixed travel the group is looking into. Carlos Osorio/AP

Legal Group Seeks 18 Agencies’ Records on Official Trips to Political Events

CREW files FOIA requests on “mixed travel” that could violate Hatch Act.

A legal nonprofit has sent letters to 18 major agencies seeking records on their officials’ “mixed travel,” or trips that have an official purpose as well as political activity.

Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington sent the Freedom of Information Act requests on Sept. 10 for relevant documents. It also sent the complaint to White House Chief of Staff John Kelly and Office of Special Counsel chief Henry Kerner, whose agency enforces the Hatch Act.

Citing Huffington Post reporting in August, CREW said, “Senior White House aides admitted that several official government events in which President Trump, members of his Cabinet, and other administration officials participated are part of a coordinated effort to help Republican candidates in the coming midterm elections.”

The leaked comments from a conference call mentioned 35 events in August affecting congressional district races and travel by Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson, Energy Secretary Rick Perry and acting Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Andrew Wheeler.

CREW is asking the 18 agencies for records of mixed travel by “any of their presidentially appointed officials, the formula for cost reimbursements in cases of mixed travel, and any records about methods the agency uses to ensure compliance with the Hatch Act when officials attend political events.”

Mixed travel has long been permitted, but the costs are required to be split between the government and political campaigns.

As soon as the Huffington Post story appeared, Deputy White House Press Secretary Lindsay Walters said, “It is unfortunate but ultimately unsurprising that a liberal publication like Huffington Post would make these misleading accusations and misconstrue the intent of the response.”

A spokesman for the Office of Special Counsel confirmed receipt of the complaint.

Past administrations have courted controversy by sending Cabinet members on campaign trips, often combined with political events, where their behavior—including whether they announce themselves by their official title—comes into play. But current-day misuse of agency travel funds by now-departed Cabinet members such as former Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price and former EPA chief Scott Pruitt have heightened the scrutiny.

On Tuesday, the Federal Aviation Administration released a review of the use of FAA planes, rather than commercial airlines by Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao. The cost to taxpayers between January and August 2017 was $93,977.84 for her and five staffers, as reported by Politico. Chao’s aides said the flights were approved by ethics officials as a suitable alternative in certain circumstances, but that she has not taken any commercial flights since February.

 CREW, which has filed hundreds of lawsuits against the Trump administration on transparency, ethics and conflict of interest issues, has been criticized for alleged liberal bias and for “having too much time on its hands,” as the Center for Consumer Freedom put it.

CREW spokesman Jordan Libowitz told Government Executive, “We are a legal organization made up of a bunch of lawyers, that’s what we do. We filed hundreds of lawsuits under the Trump administration and hundreds under the Obama administration—in fact many of our recent cases began under Obama.”