House Oversight Subcommittee Issues Testimony From Paul Rosenzweig
I thank you for your invitation to appear today and to present testimony on the issue of Federal Whistleblowers. My name is
I am also the Principal and founder of a small consulting company,
My testimony today is in my individual capacity and does not reflect the views of any institution with which I am affiliated or any of my various clients.
By way of background, after serving as a career prosecutor in the
Perhaps most saliently, in addition to being a Lecturer at George Washington, I am a former Adjunct Lecturer at the
Though I am generally thought of as a conservative, my testimony today is, I hope, nonpartisan in nature, since I believe that the issue of whistleblower protections is one of enduring interest to both parties and, indeed, to all Americans. In my testimony today, I want to make four basic points:
* First, whistleblowers are not an afterthought. Though they are mentioned nowhere in the
* Second, the existing structure of whistleblower protections is, at least to some degree, grounded in Constitutional freedoms. Beyond that,
* Third, for that reason it is utterly unsurprising that whistleblower protections have always had bipartisan support, both in
* Fourth, finally, I offer a word about the idea of confidentiality and anonymity--a topic I know is of some controversy today. I would hope that the temper of the moment would not undermine our well-grounded belief that whistleblower anonymity, when asked for, is a fundamentally positive value. All too frequently, whistleblowers have faced retaliation for their actions. If we wish them to have a positive incentive to come forward--and I think we all agree that we do-- then it is, in my view, essential in some circumstances to provide whistleblowers with the protection of anonymity when they do so.
Why We Have Whistleblowers - Constitutional Theory and the Fundamental Tension/2
The case for whistleblowers is simple--we have whistleblowers because we value freedom, transparency and accountability. Though we want a government that works, we want one that is limited and does not become unaccountable.
Americans value limited government because we value freedom--and we think that government is as much a threat to freedom as an enabler of it. Indeed, distrust of government is the foundational insight of the Declaration of Independence--an assertion that the rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness are inalienable rights that inhere to the citizens by virtue of their humanity--and not, in any way, derived from or granted by governments as a matter of grace. If you see government as subordinate to natural rights then, naturally, you see a need for ways of effectively checking government abuse and overreach.
At the same time, however, we want a government that works and works well. The desire for order and government protection stretches at least as far back as the Hobbesian concern that, without government, life is "nasty, brutish and short." That concern finds strong echoes in the preamble to the
We've recognized this tension since the dawn of liberal democracy in America.
We must guard against this natural tendency. Though Jefferson was right that we must be cautious,
Thus, the obligation of the government is a dual one: to protect civil safety and security against violence, and to preserve civil liberty. That dual obligation remains, at the core, the challenge of the effectiveness/ accountability debate.
Fundamental to the resolution of that debate are the whistleblower provisions of American law. They provide an authorized, lawful way in which members of the executive branch can provide greater transparency and accountability for our government--both to other branches of the government and to the American public. In short, whistleblowers are a way of helping us achieve a balance: As citizens we want an effective government, but it has to be one that is circumscribed by law and policy.
Whistleblowers have always been recognized as one outlet for that tension and a way of defusing it.
The Constitutional and Statutory Framework These theoretical considerations find expression in a Constitutional and statutory framework that has long recognized the value of whistleblowers. Indeed, whistleblowing by federal employees has a history that pre-dates the formation of the Republic. Perhaps the very first American whistleblower was a member of the
Modern law reflects that historic commitment. To begin with, at least since the 1968 decision in Pickering v.
The Whistleblower Protection Act (WPA), was first passed as part of the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 and then separated into its own law in 1989. This act applies the Pickering balancing test to provide absolute protection for disclosures of information that an employee reasonably believes convey evidence of illegality, gross waste, abuse of authority, gross mismanagement, or a substantial and specific danger to public health or safety./8
The WPA is invaluable for congressional oversight. For that reason,
The WPEA restored the Act's original free speech mandate by systematically canceling 13 years of hostile precedents from the
All alleged violations of whistleblower rights can be enforced through investigations by the
For cases that involve severe consequences to the employee, such as suspension of greater than two weeks or termination, the employee can assert the whistleblower defense through an appeal straight to the board./11
However, statutory rights in the WPA do not apply to employees with national security intelligence jobs.
For those employees, the Intelligence Community Whistleblower Protection Act of 1998 (ICWPA)/12 was established to create a forum for disclosures by intelligence agency employees, but its own regulations specifically state that it does not exist to protect government intelligence employees or contractors against reprisal. Instead it serves primarily as a classified conduit for specific types of "urgent actions" to be referred to by OIGs of the various intelligence agencies or to the intelligence committees in
Section 702 of the Act defines "urgent concerns" to include false statement to
Likewise, in the last
Indeed, as
Why Confidentiality? Finally, we might address the most salient issue of current import, namely the rules that provide a whistleblower with confidentiality. This has, of course, been of some note recently, and it would be frivolous to have a hearing where the issue was not considered.
And so, again, we ask a question of first principles: Why should we provide whistleblowers with the benefit of confidentiality? Then answer, it seems to me, is much like our answer regarding any question of privilege and confidentiality: We think that the guarantee of confidentiality gains us more in transparency than it loses.
Broadly speaking, the idea is that we wish to enable the candid disclosure of misconduct by officials with knowledge, because that misconduct often involves matters of national security and domestic economic prosperity and is of critical importance to the nation. Given the well-known record of retaliation against those disclosing misconduct, it hardly seems plausible that a whistleblower could do his or her job and fulfill their obligations without the protection of anonymity. It is thought that protecting the confidentiality of these disclosures will foster open communication.
In many ways this rationale mirrors that of more familiar confidentiality protections like attorney-client privilege or the executive privilege. Any American who hires a lawyer can rely on the attorney-client privilege--the general idea that your lawyer is not permitted and cannot be compelled to disclose whatever you tell her in confidence as part of her representation of you. The attorney-client privilege has been around for a long while, and is generally meant to encourage clients to be truthful with their lawyers. If a defendant thought that his attorney could be compelled to turn around and repeat what he had said, the defendant would, in turn, be most unlikely to tell his lawyer the unvarnished version of what happened. As anyone who has practiced criminal-defense law will tell you, this is already often the case, but it would be even more pervasive if the privilege didn't exist.
Likewise, the executive privilege (so much in the news today) extends not just to the legal advice that the president receives but, at least in theory, to all of the many communications that take place within the executive branch that are intended to develop policy for the benefit of the president. As the
In all of these cases, by protecting the confidentiality of the communications and, in the case of a whistleblower, the anonymity as well, we advance important--indeed vital--national goals of enhancing the transparency and accountability of government and in fostering candid discussions of issues of public concern.
Conclusion In the end, I think the tension metaphor may present a false choice--that you can either have transparency and accountability or you can have secrecy and effectiveness. If we really were put to such a choice, it would be a difficult, almost existential question. But that choice is not real. We can and do have both transparency and secrecy, both accountability and effectiveness. Our goal for things like whistleblower laws should be to maximize both values to the extent practicable.
And that, at bottom, is the theme of this hearing. It's not about "resolving" the fundamental tensions inherent to American democracy. It's about managing them and living with them and accommodating the competing values to the maximum extent practicable. We all want to be safe, we all want an effective government that can provide national security, and we all want one that acts within the rule of law. We all want a government that is transparent and accountable, not despotic. And we all want a legal and policy structure that fosters our desires.
Sometimes we get the balance wrong. Far more often, as we would expect in a pluralistic society, we simply disagree about precisely how to achieve the ends we seek. You will see much of that disagreement played out in public debates today. But at its core, the discussion we are having today is a good thing--it's a legal analysis of a living, breathing aspect of a functioning democracy. As long as questions like those being asked by this committee are asked, we can feel reasonably confident about the safety of the Republic.
* * *
Footnotes:
1.
2. Portions of this section are derived from earlier work I did with my colleagues
3. Letter to
4.
5.
6.
7. 5 U.S.C. Sec. 2302(b)(11).
8. 5 U.S.C. Sec. 2302(b)(8).
9. Pub. L. No. 112-199, 126 Stat. 1465, 112th Cong., 2d Sess. (
10. 5 U.S.C. Sec. 1221.
11. Id. Sec. 7701
12. Title VII, Pub. L. No. 105-272, 105th Cong., 2d Sess. (1998).
13. Letter from Rep.
14.
15. Rep.
16.
17. Letter from
18.



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