Govt Watchdog: Politics caused 'Sharpiegate' frantic rebuke
Political pressure from the
Commerce Department Inspector General
“Instead of focusing on NOAA’s successful hurricane forecast, the Department unnecessarily rebuked NWS forecasters for issuing a public safety message about Hurricane Dorian in response to public inquiries—that is, for doing their jobs,” the report concluded.
Former Obama NOAA chief
At issue was a
The tweet came out 10 minutes after President
By the time the two tweets were posted,
However,
The dustup came to be referred to as “Sharpiegate” after the president later displayed a
Four days after the tweets, then acting
That triggered a series of texts, emails and phone calls involving Ross underlings, especially
Jacobs said “things went crazy in the middle of the night.”
Then-
Walsh denied that to the inspector general. The report said there was no credible evidence found to say that jobs were threatened. However, Jacobs told the inspector general’s office he “definitely felt like our jobs were on the line” but that “nobody told me I was going to get fired.”
The eventual unsigned statement from
Dorian made landfall in
“By requiring
The report also criticized Roberts for deleting text messages, which is contrary to government document retention rules.
In a statement attached to the report, Walsh said the report’s conclusions “are completely unsupported by any of the evidence or factual findings that the report lays out. The Inspector General instead selectively quotes from interviews, takes facts out of context.”
The
Sen.
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