Sunday May 27, 2012
End of a Scandal? NLRB Member Terence Flynn Resigns; Prosecution Still Possible
WASHINGTON, D.C.—Amid accusations that he broke the law by leaking
information to then-top Romney adviser Peter Schaumber, embattled GOP
National Labor Relations Board member Terence Flynn resigned Saturday
evening. The NRLB's Inspector General (IG) had been investigating Flynn
for leaking confidential pre-trial information to top Romney advisors
and for allegedly drafting op-eds and preparing Schaumber, who was
Romney's labor policy advisor, for television appearances and debates.
Flynn has denied any wrongdoing. The leaks allegedly occurred last
year, before Flynn was appointed to the NLRB in January by President
Obama, when Flynn was working as a lawyer for the federal agency, which
mediates labor disputes.
The IG alleged that
Flynn may have violated the Hatch Act by providing “non-public
deliberative information and other assistance to Peter Schaumber, a
co-chair of the Labor Policy Advisory Group for the Mitt Romney
Presidential campaign.” The Hatch Act prohibits federal employees from
using their official power to influence the results of an
election. (Since the NLRB IG's report was released earlier this year,
the Romney campaign has said Schaumber left the campaign in December
2011, but serious questions about the validity of that story remain unanswered.)
Recently, Congressman George Miller (D-Calif.) and Congressman Elijah
Cummings referred the matter for prosecution by the Office of Special
Counsel. (The Office of Special Counsel will not comment on whether it
will prosecute Flynn.) House Education, Labor and Pension Chairman
Senator Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) also recently threatened to hold hearings on
the matter.
As I reported in late March, AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka called on
Flynn to resign after the release of the first of two NLRB IG reports
showing Flynn had provided confidential information to the Romney
campaign and helped Schaumber craft attacks on the NLRB. Trumka said
that “The report makes clear that Schaumber used his inside connections
through his former chief counsel Flynn to get internal, confidential
information that he then utilized in ongoing public attacks on the
actions of the NLRB. These unethical practices are unprecedented and
indefensible.”
A second report by the IG on why Flynn leaked information to Schaumber
concluded that Flynn did so in exchange for Schaumber's efforts to
secure Flynn's appointment to the NLRB. NLRB IG Dave Berry wrote, “The
situation gives rise to the appearance that Mr. Flynn’s disclosure of
deliberative information and assistance to former Member Schaumber was
in return for former Member Schaumber’s lobbying on behalf of Mr.
Flynn’s nomination.”
After the release of that report, NLRB Chairman Mark Pearce said, “We
take the findings in these reports very seriously. They raise questions
of ethics and trust that go to the heart of the values shared by all of
us at the NLRB. Those concerns are paramount in our minds as we
consider the necessary response.”
In a prepared statement, Barry Coburn, a lawyer for Terence Flynn, said
Flynn’s "contacts with Mr. Schaumber, his friend and former colleague,
were not illegal in any respect." Coburn said that
Flynn "does not deserve to be publicly smeared," and said that
"circumstances are precisely what deter people like Mr. Flynn from
government service."
It is unclear if Flynn’s resignation will affect any potential criminal
investigations launched by the Office of Special Counsel or any future
hearings threatened by Harkin. Pearce said he intends to issue a
statement on the matter this week.
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