GOP Leaders Fire Off Letter Demanding Garland Withdraw Memo To FBI About SchoolsThe Daily Wire: Hank Berrien
Washington,
October 26, 2021
On Monday, a group of GOP members of the House Judiciary Committee fired off a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland, demanding he “fully and unequivocally withdraw” his memorandum that “target[ed] concerned parents at school board meetings” and was sent to FBI Director Christopher A. Wray and federal prosecutors. The group started by referring to Garland’s testimony before the Judiciary Committee last week concerning the October 4, 2021, memorandum, calling the testimony “troubling.” They pointed out:
“You admitted to being completely unaware of a widely reported, high-profile case in Loudoun County, Virginia, cited in the NSBA’s letter as an example of domestic terrorism, in which a father angrily confronted the local school board about the heinous sexual assault of his daughter,” they continued. They turned to Garland’s efforts to avoid discussing the effect of his memorandum:
“On October 22, 2021, the NSBA expressed regret about and formally apologized for its letter to President Biden,” they noted, claiming, “Because the NSBA letter was the basis for your memorandum and given that your memorandum has been and will continue to be read as threatening parents and chilling their protected First Amendment rights, the only responsible course of action is for you to fully and unequivocally withdraw your memorandum immediately.” In the memorandum, Garland wrote:
Last Thursday, Rep. Mike Johnson (R-LA) grilled Garland over a possible conflict of interest from the memorandum. In the letter, the National School Boards Association stated, “As these acts of malice, violence, and threats against public school officials have increased, the classification of these heinous actions could be the equivalent to a form of domestic terrorism and hate crimes.” Johnson pointed out a federal regulation dealing with rules of impartiality for executive branch employees and officials in reference to Garland’s son-in-law, who reportedly co-founded a company that publishes and sells materials sympathetic to Critical Race Theory and so-called “anti-racism” ideas to schools across the country. Johnson repeatedly asked Garland if he had asked for ethical guidance as to the propriety of the memo; Garland repeatedly answered that the memorandum targeted “violence and threats of violence” but would not commit to any kind of an ethics inquiry.
Johnson pointed out, “We need objective third-parties to review our activities. You don’t get to make that decision yourself.” |