By Jesse J. Holland
Associated Press
WASHINGTON – Congressional investigators on Friday sued Vice President Dick Cheney in an effort to determine which business executives met with President Bush’s energy task force.
The General Accounting Office wants to require the administration to identify the executives – including some from now-collapsed Enron Corp. – who met with last year with the task force while a national energy policy was being developed.
But Bush has refused to hand over the documents, saying to do so would encroach on his ability to get outside views.
The White House also argues that the GAO has overstepped its authority by asking the vice president for information on the task force.
The GAO, Congress’s investigative unit, says oversight of energy policy and investigation of Enron, a Houston-based energy trading company, are “important institutional prerogatives” of Congress. Enron was the largest single corporate benefactor of Bush’s political career.
The dispute began last April but gained political traction once Enron, entered into bankruptcy on Dec. 2.
The lawsuit names only Cheney as defendant, but both as vice president and as chairman of Bush’s energy task force. It was filed in U.S. District Court in Washington.
Solicitor General Theodore Olson, who supervises government appellate work for the administration, and Associate Attorney General Jay Stephens, head of the Justice Department’s civil division, will lead the administration’s fight against the GAO suit, the White House said Thursday.
The GAO hired Washington law firm Sidley Austin Brown &Wood to represent it in the suit.
The lawsuit is the GAO’s first against part of the federal government to get documents it wants.
The GAO has forced a showdown with the executive branch in disputes over gathering information just four other times in the past 21 years. In two of those instances, the incumbent administration supplied the information.
In the other two, the administration filed certification letters saying turning over the information could “substantially impair” government operations. That letter keeps the information private.
The White House and the GAO have not tried to negotiated a settlement since Comptroller General David Walker on Jan. 30 said he would go forward with the lawsuit.
There probably won’t be a compromise, said a senior administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity.
GAO officials say, however, they are not seeking notes, minutes, transcripts or records of meetings from the vice president or the energy task force. Instead, Walker offered in July to scale back the request to only names of people involved and the subject and cost of each meeting, GAO officials said.
The White House said it would challenge GAO’s ability to seek the information, saying the law specifies that the agency’s purpose is to investigate the expenditure and disbursement of public money.
The White House has provided the agency information relating to direct and indirect costs of the energy task force, the official said.
“We believe that is the extent of the scope of authority of GAO to access information from the vice president’s offices,” the official said. “If the GAO wants any additional information, they have to look elsewhere.”
Copyright ©2002 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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