For Immediate Release
July 24, 2012
Contact:
Julia Lawless (Hatch)
202.224.4515
Garrette Silverman (Moran)
202.224.6521
Hatch, Moran Question Treasury's Use of Taxpayer Dollars in
Social Media Campaigns
In Letter to Treasury Secretary, Senators Write, "Your
political rhetoric aside, Treasury's social media links to
instances in which you advocate that Congress act on
legislative proposals seem contrary to appropriations
language."
WASHINGTON -Today, U.S. Senators Orrin Hatch (R-Utah),
Ranking Member of the Senate Finance Committee and Jerry
Moran (R-Kan.), Ranking Member of the Senate Subcommittee
on Financial Services and General Government, questioned
the U.S. Dept. of the Treasury's legal authority to use
taxpayer dollars to fund social media campaigns designed to
defeat legislation pending before the U.S. Congress.
This month, Treasury posted, across several social media
outlets, material targeting appropriations bills pending
before Congress - H.R. 5973 & H.R. 6020 - and advocating
that more funds be appropriated to other federal
agencies. In a letter to Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner today, the lawmakers argued such action is
contrary to appropriations language, and runs counter to
laws and statutes that forbid agencies from spending
appropriated funds to lobby for or against legislation.
"Throughout many of your social media postings, there are
links to presentations designed to support or defeat
legislation pending before the Congress," the Senators
wrote. "Your political rhetoric aside, Treasury's social
media links to instances in which you advocate that
Congress act on legislative proposals seem contrary to
appropriations language."
Below is the full text of the letter:
July 24, 2012
The Honorable Timothy Geithner
Secretary, Department of the Treasury
1500 Pennsylvania Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20220
Dear Secretary Geithner:
As the Ranking Members of the Senate Committee on Finance
and the Senate Subcommittee on Financial Services and
General Government, we share responsibility for oversight
of Treasury activities, for authorization of those
activities, and for the funding of your Department's
operation. Over the past few years, Treasury
activities in the so-called "social media" (e.g.,
Treasury's: "Treasury Notes" blog; "Twitter" account;
"Facebook" page; "YouTube" postings; "Flickr" entries;
"slideshare" entries) have been expanded significantly and
at some cost to the taxpayers.
In recent postings to the Treasury Notes blog, Treasury's
Twitter account," Treasury's Facebook page, and to
slideshare, the Treasury department broadcast, under
Treasury's logo, the attached "infographic" which
identifies appropriations legislation pending before the
Congress as "Pound Foolish." Elsewhere throughout
many of your social media postings, there are links to
presentations designed to support or defeat legislation
pending before the Congress. For example, there are
links in your social media postings to a 2011 interview on
BloombergTV with you, during which you advocated that
Congress adopt what the President labeled his "American
Jobs Act" and you stated that "if Congress doesn't act,
it'll be because Republicans decided they did not want to
do anything to help the economy."
Your political rhetoric aside, Treasury's social media
links to instances in which you advocate that Congress act
on legislative proposals seem contrary to appropriations
language (e.g., Sections 716 and 719 of P.L. 112-74).
The infographic referred to above appears clearly to be
designed to defeat legislation pending before the
Congress. At a minimum, such activity runs counter to
P.L. 112-74 and a statute (P.L. 66-5; 41 Stat. 68; 18
U.S.C. 1913) forbidding agencies from spending appropriated
funds to encourage the public to contact Members of
Congress.
With respect to the attached infographic, while you
continue to promote the so-called "Dodd-Frank" financial
reforms, your interest in such promotion does not
constitute a rationale for spending funds appropriated to
Treasury in an attempt to defeat appropriations legislation
pending before Congress. Moreover, it is unclear why
the Treasury Department is spending taxpayer funds
advocating that more funds be appropriated to the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). Those agencies
stand apart from Treasury.
I request that you respond to the following, by close of
business on July 30:
1. Identify any and all "social media"
outlets used by Treasury.
2. Identify your understanding of the
laws, regulations, guidelines, and precedent governing what
you may or may not broadcast on your social media
outlets.
3. Provide all internal (to the Treasury
Department) policies and procedures governing what you may
or may not broadcast on your social media outlets,
including the date(s) on which those policies and
procedures were adopted and modified.
4. Provide an accounting of the Treasury
personnel, in terms of full-time equivalents and outlays
for their work time, devoted to feeding, monitoring,
updating, and maintaining your social media outlet
presence.
5. Provide an accounting of any public
relations or public affairs firms with which Treasury
contracts for services related to your social media
outlets, and associated outlays.
6. Provide Treasury's policies on social
media "linking," including the date(s) on which those
policies were adopted and modified.
7. Provide Treasury's policies on
"retweeting" posts, such as the "retweets" of "tweets" of
the White House, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
or other independent agencies.
8. Identify what your objective was in
broadcasting, across many social media outlets, the
attached infographic, and why your Department is lobbying
on behalf of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission with respect to
appropriations.
9. Provide any communications that your
Department had with the SEC and CFTC with respect to the
attached infographic.
10. Identify what you believe are limits
on what your social media outlets may broadcast to express
your Department's interest in supporting or defeating
legislation pending before the Congress.
We will appreciate your prompt response to these requests.
Sincerely,
HATCH
MORAN
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