At least four senior officials in President Trump's White House have active accounts on a private Republican National Committee (RNC) email system, according to a new report.
Counselor Kellyanne Conway, White House press secretary Sean Spicer, chief strategist and senior counselor Stephen Bannon and senior adviser Jared Kushner — Trump's son-in-law — all have rnchq.org email accounts, Newsweek reported Wednesday.
Trump repeatedly attacked 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton last year for using a private email server during her tenure as secretary of State.
[...] Newsweek added the rnchq.org email system caused controversy during former President George W. Bush's administration.
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) accused Bush White House staffers in 2007 of using the system to evade transparency.
The rnchq.org email system was involved in the loss of 22 million Bush administration emails, Newsweek reported, many from around the start of the Iraq War.
Former President Obama’s administration found the lost emails after private lawsuits were filed, it added.
Those messages are now in the National Archives, according to Newsweek, but remain under the national security shield and have not been seen by the public.
[Update:] Newsweek updated its story and is now reporting:
Since this story was published, the RNC has deleted the emails of Bannon, Kushner and Conway. RNC spokesman Ryan Mahoney told Newsweek Wednesday night that the emails were set up only for distribution lists, “There is nothing wrong with having an RNC account if it is not used for any official government business,” he said. “In this case, the officials previously employed by the Trump campaign never had functional email accounts with the RNC. The RNC has various distribution lists to communicate with state parties or campaigns, and as a byproduct these contact groups are assigned RNCHQ.org addresses that only forward to external accounts at their respective organizations.”
(Score: 4, Insightful) by Zz9zZ on Thursday January 26 2017, @08:34PM
Especially when its directly linked to a major political party. I almost feel that certain public officials should have all their communications monitored. We got it backwards, they shouldn't be using mass surveillance on the general population, they should be using it on government officials to make sure there aren't any of those nasty conflicts of interest. The public puts their trust in elected officials, yet it is apparently the easiest thing in the world for them to create policies that benefit their financial interests. As long as we're gong down the Orwellian route how about we at least try and make it work for the benefit of the general public?
~Tilting at windmills~
(Score: 2, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 26 2017, @08:39PM
Privacy for the people.
Surveillance for the powerful.
Of course the practical effect of that is surveillance for nobody because the powerful can afford to circumvent surveillance.
But that's better than the current state of affairs.
(Score: 2) by cykros on Friday January 27 2017, @06:41AM
The arms race of the powerful circumventing surveillance and the increasingly powerful surveillance will doubtlessly be a boon to the economy.