Lawmakers Say Documents Show DHS Secretary Mayorkas Misled Congress About Disinformation Board, Demand Hearing

spot_img

After the board was announced, critics quickly raised concerns about its implications for free speech and the Constitution.

Several Republican senators are demanding a hearing saying they received documents from a Department of Homeland Security whistleblower about the agency’s new disinformation governance board that allegedly show DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas misled a Senate committee when he testified about the board last month.

The lawmakers sent a letter this week to Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich., chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee asking for a hearing on the issue where Mayorkas could come back for questioning.

“We write to request you convene a hearing with Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas as soon as possible to answer critical questions about apparently misleading testimony before the Committee on May 4 on the Department of Homeland Security Disinformation Governance Board (the Board),” the letter said. “We are deeply concerned that documents recently obtained by Senators Josh Hawley and Chuck Grassley contradict the Secretary’s testimony and public statements about the Board.”

This kerfuffle is the latest in a string of disputes around the board, not the least of which included Nina Jankowicz’ resignation from leading the board after controversial social media videos surfaced.

The Republican senators published the DHS documents online purporting to show documented evidence that Mayorkas misrepresented the purpose of the board.

“Responding to a question from a reporter ‘Will American citizens be monitored?’ Secretary Mayorkas responded unequivocally ‘No,’ adding that ‘We at the Department of Homeland Security don’t monitor American citizens,’” the letter said. “He went on to suggest the Board would be concentrating on foreign threats – ’addressing the threat of disinformation from foreign state adversaries [and] from the cartels.’ Yet talking points prepared by Ms. Jankowicz, the Board’s then–Executive Director appear to show that the Department does in fact monitor American citizens and that the Board’s work is concentrated on domestic threats.”

The documents also give evidence that the federal agency has been working on the disinformation board longer than Mayorkas let on in his testimony.

“At the May 4 hearing, Secretary Mayorkas testified that the Board ‘has not yet begun its work,’” the letter said. “Yet the documents indicate the Secretary had stood up the Board on February 24, 2022 – more than two months earlier. The Board’s charter, signed by the Secretary, required the Board meet ‘regularly’ and ‘no less than once per quarter.’ Another document dated only six days before Secretary Mayorkas appeared before the Committee provides preparatory materials for a meeting between Under Secretary for Policy Robert Silvers and Twitter. The document was prepared by Ms. Nina Jankowicz in her capacity as ‘Executive Director DHS Disinformation Governance Board,’ clearly evidencing that the Board had already begun its work.”

After the board was announced, critics quickly raised concerns about its implications for free speech and the Constitution.

“Any regime with an organized disinformation effort directed at its own people is one that is moving away from self-government and toward state control of the most basic aspects of liberty,” said Matthew Spalding, Constitutional expert and Dean of the Van Andel Graduate School of Government for Hillsdale College.

Now, the lawmakers are calling for a hearing, but whether that hearing will actually happen remains to be seen.

“The American public deserves transparency and honest answers to important questions about the true nature and purpose of the Disinformation Governance Board and it is clear that Secretary Mayorkas has not provided them – to the public or this Committee,” the letter said. “Therefore, we request you hold a hearing with Secretary Mayorkas and join us in insisting that all records related to the Board be provided to the Committee prior to the hearing.”

Sen. Peter’s office and the DHS did not respond to a request for comment in time for publication.

By Casey Harper
Go to Source
Reposted with permission

spot_img
josh kaul

Josh Kaul Emerges From Hibernation, Refuses to Oppose Abolishing the Police

Josh Kaul, the laziest attorney general Wisconsin ever had (which is saying a lot since JB Van Hollen was hardly a firestorm of ambition),...
tom tiffany

Tom Tiffany Is the State Dad, Kelda Roys Is the Crazy Aunt, and Herb Kohl Did the Milk Thing First

I went for a five-mile walk inside Brookfield Square Mall today because it was raining, and, wow, has that place gone downhill. It’s a...

D-Day: 82 Years Later, I Stood on Omaha Beach, Remembering the Young Men Who Died for Liberty

'The Normandy-area folks are deeply aware of the fact that if not for the 2,500 brave young men who stormed those beaches on June...
menominee county

The Wildly Blue Wisconsin County and It’s Not Milwaukee or Dane: Menominee County’s Unusual Democrat Tilt

In a state where elections turn on 10,000-30,000 votes, every vote really matters. One county stands out dramatically in Wisconsin vote totals, wildly swinging toward...

Mandela Barnes Doesn’t Know What a Musky Looks Like, Fishing Bobbers, and the Rural Vote

Advice for Democrats. Stop posting about fish, talking about fish, and holding fish on camera if you don’t really know anything about fish and...
michael alfonso

Mike Alfonso, George Washington, Jessi Ebben’s Signature Gambit, and the Audacity of Duffy Inc.

Youthful Wisconsin congressional candidate Mike Alfonso’s online buddies have started comparing him to the Founding Fathers. It’s bad enough that they think the Marathon...

Old McDonald Had a Farm, But Tom Tiffany Really Grew Up on One

Farming is starting to define the Wisconsin governor’s race. That’s probably a good thing for Tom Tiffany because he actually grew up on one,...
sylvia ortiz-velez

Sylvia Ortiz-Velez’s Lawyer Blasts Democrat Insider Effort to Kick Her Off Ballot

Michael Chernin, the lawyer for Democrat state Rep. Sylvia Ortiz-Velez (D-Milwaukee), is blasting a new filing by the Assembly Democratic Campaign Committee seeking to...
francesca hong

Sylvia Ortiz-Velez & Francesca Hong: Democrats Go WILD on Free-Thinking Minority Women. It’s a Political ‘Witch Burning’

What do state Rep. Sylvia Ortiz-Velez and upstart gubernatorial candidate Francesca Hong have in common? They’re both outspoken anti-establishment Democrat minority women who are...
Wisconsin Supreme Court Redistricting Hearing Wisconsin should soon have an answer about ballot drop boxes and just who can return absentee ballots. wisconsin supreme court

Justice Rebecca Bradley Calls Courts’ Map Review Doing ‘Bidding of political masters’

(The Center Square) – A conservative Wisconsin Supreme Court justice called the courts’ decision to hear a case challenging the state’s congressional maps doing the “bidding of its political masters” rather than a proper decision.

The court sent an order stating that it would hear an appeal of a three-judge panel’s ruling not to hear the case but said that it would not hear the case on a requested expedited schedule.

“The Democratic Party bought multiple seats on this court to achieve yet another outcome unobtainable democratically,” Justice Rebecca Bradley wrote in dissent.

Bradley joined Justice Annette Ziegler in dissent against hear the case from the Wisconsin Business Leaders for Democracy that a three-judge panel dismissed on April 28.

“It is indeed rare that I feel compelled to object to hearing a case,” Ziegler wrote. “But here, I have concluded this is too important to stand silent. The public should be informed of the requests afoot and it should have the opportunity to stay abreast of these proceedings.

“And, of course, the briefing and arguments could cause me to conclude that this appeal was proper and relief should be granted. We shall see.”

The majority of judges took offense at Bradley’s insinuation that the decision to hear the case was politically motivated, calling the dissent “false, inappropriate, and disingenuous charges.”

“Deciding to hear a case does not reflect any weighing of the merits of any party’s claims, let alone prejudgment about who will prevail and why,” Justice Rebecca Dallet wrote. “We do not prejudge cases, and for that reason, we do not comment at this early stage on the parties’ legal theories, or try to develop arguments in favor of one side or another.”

Ziegler wrote that it was “shocking” the case would be reviewed without analysis of the jurisdiction of the case, if there is a proper claim or if there is even a right to appeal the ruling of a three-judge panel. She pointed to four other times that the Wisconsin Supreme Court had determined that the current congressional map would not be reviewed.

uw-madison Administrators at UW Schools

Republicans Push Back Against UW System Tuition Increase Proposal

(The Center Square) – Several Republican lawmakers are upset with the University of Wisconsin System’s proposal to increase tuition by 2% a year after a 5% increase.

Sen. Patrick Testin, R-Stevens Point, went as far as saying that a pair of trustees “lied to all our faces” in committee testimony when they said that tuition would not be raised again this soon.

“Unfortunately, students and their families are the ones who will be paying the price for this dishonesty,” Testin said in a statement. “At least we now know that we can no longer take the UW Board of Regents at their word.

“My Joint Finance Committee colleagues and I certainly will not forget this betrayal when the regents and UW officials come begging to us for more money during next year’s state budget deliberations. This is simply unacceptable.”

The 2% increase for resident undergraduate tuition would be effective this fall. The university said in a press release that the increase is below the current inflation rate. The increase also includes a 3.5% increase in segregated fees, which are for student services, activities, programs, and facilities. In all, it would be a 2.5% average increase across tuition, segregated fees and room and board.

“We recognize Wisconsin families are managing rising costs in every part of their lives, and that reality informed this proposal,” Universities of Wisconsin Interim President Renée Wachter said in a statement. “This is a measured increase that helps our universities continue providing strong student support and high-quality academic experiences while keeping a UW education among the most affordable in the Midwest.”

Sen. Eric Wimberger, R-Gillett, pointed out that, over the past 10 years, the system has added 2,400 non-faculty staff positions while educating 16,000 fewer students.

Wimberger said that, if the system would “eliminate their administrative bloat,” it would free up $750 million.

“UW’s leadership is continuing to pass its payroll expenses onto students and their families, when it should be cutting its massive bureaucracy and reinvesting its funds to create a more valuable student experience,” Wimberger said in a statement. “No amount of money will ever be enough for satisfy these bureaucrats, and the bright students who attend our universities are only left with a worse education.”

Dianne hesselbein

Tony Evers Drops TRUTH BOMBS on Sneaky Senate Democrat Leader Dianne Hesselbein

At first, I thought Tony Evers had moved onto the acceptance phase of grief. A defeated Evers, looking exhausted and a bit rumpled, stood...
gina paulick

Mt. Pleasant Trustee Gina Paulick Launches Assembly Campaign Focused on Small Business, Strong Schools

Gina Cefalu Paulick, current Village Trustee for Mount Pleasant, officially announced her candidacy for Wisconsin State Assembly District 66, which includes Mount Pleasant, Sturtevant,...
dan Knodl

Dan Knodl: Order Matters, and Victims Deserve Their Voices to Be Heard on Commutations

By: Representative Dan Knodl – 24th Assembly District, Wisconsin State Legislature One of the most important lessons from the last several decades of criminal justice...
rebecca cooke

Rebecca Cooke Would Make Western Wisconsin a ‘Magnet’ for Illegal Immigration: Van Orden

Rebecca Cooke "proudly touted an endorsement from AFSCME, a union that sued the Trump Administration over efforts to keep illegal aliens from obtaining CDLs,"...

Democrat Bulls Identify as Cows & Dianne Hesselbein Takes a Shiv to Taxpayers With a Silken Smile

Republicans all posted about milk, farming and dairy today. It’s Dairy Month. Democrats posted about gay people. Democrat gubernatorial candidate David Crowley added a...
francesca hong

On Anarchist Francesca Hong’s ‘Rehabilitation Services’ and a World Without Prisons

I was going to take a few days off from writing satirical pieces because it’s a nice day outside, and I need to organize...
Fed Hikes Interest Rates

Kevin Warsh Has His Hands Full | UP AGAINST THE WALL

By: Terrence Wall Welcome to the Fed, Mr. Warsh. Warsh is now ‘Chairman’. Now, the title of Chairman really means more than it does in...

The Great Media Pile On Tom Tiffany & The Phenomenon of ‘Campaign Bros’

Don’t let the media and Democrats gaslight voters into thinking the guy (Tom Tiffany) who DOESN’T want to abolish police is the crazy one....

Compromise Shouldn’t Be a Dirty Word in Wisconsin Politics

By WI Assembly Majority Leader Tyler August Over the past several months, Legislative Republicans and Governor Tony Evers engaged in serious conversations about how to...