The Office of Special Counsel determined Thursday that White House senior aide Kellyanne Conway violated the Hatch Act and is “recommending her removal from federal service.”
The Hatch Act prohibits federal employees working in the executive branch– minus the president and vice president – from wading in divisive political waters and using their position to overtly engage in political campaign activities.
On Thursday, the Office of the Special Counsel labeled Conway a “repeat offender” of the Hatch Act and recommended her “removal from federal service.”
Conway found herself under fire for remarks she made about then-Alabama senate candidate Doug Jones in November 2017. She described him as “weak on crime” and “terrible for property owners” during an appearance on Fox and Friends. However, she did not explicitly state support for Jones’ challenger, Roy Moore.
“I’m telling you that we want the votes in the Senate to get this tax bill through,” she said at the time.
Abbott clears final redistricting hurdle as Texas Senate passes new Trump-approved map
Lyle Menendez denied parole by California board in Beverly Hills murder case
Virginia leaders condemn racist sign aimed at Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears over bathroom policy
George Mason University violated Tile VI with ‘unlawful DEI policies,’ Education Department says
Viral photos of deer with strange warts follow ‘Frankenstein’ rabbit, squirrel sightings
Multiple Fatalities Reported After Packed Bus Crashes for ‘Unknown Reasons’ – Interstate Shut Down
Chinese national sentenced to prison for sabotaging employer’s systems with ‘kill switch’
California parents arrested, charged with murder of missing 7-month-old son after mother’s story falls apart
Hundreds of DoD civilians accept call of duty in southern border mission under Trump’s order
10 key takeaways from DOJ’s release of Ghislaine Maxwell’s Epstein interviews
National Guard mobilizing in 19 states amid immigration, crime crackdown
Insult to Injury: Texas Dems Who Fled State in Failed Attempt to Thwart Redistricting Ordered to Pay Up
Watch: Scott Jennings Uses John Bolton’s Own Words Against Him in Wake of FBI Raid
Fox News Politics Newsletter: Maxwell denies Trump misconduct, DOJ docs reveal
Noem torches ‘activist liberal judges’ after Abrego Garcia’s release from jail: ‘New low’
Conway also experienced backlash after weighing in on the Democratic 2020 frontrunner Joe Biden, mentioning his record on immigration and other issues.
“I’m going to talk about people’s records because I have the right to,” Conway said, according to the Hill. “I’m not concerned about Joe Biden.”
Supporters of Conway argue that she is not going out of her way to influence political campaign activities. Rather, she is acting as a spokeswoman and defending President Trump and the administration as a whole by correcting the record from a range of misleading anti-Trump reports.
Rumblings of Conway’s potential Hatch Act violations have been brewing for months. Conway addressed the reports in May, telling a reporter, “If you’re trying to silence me through the Hatch Act, it’s not going to work.”
Read the OSC’s full report:
Story cited here.