After President Barack Obama made numerous promises for a more transparent government, the Department of Labor (DOL) has, for nearly six months, hidden Big Labor insiders Hilda Solis and Deborah Greenfield activities from National Right to Work Foundation President Mark Mix’s Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request.
Witnessing the Administration’s corrupt Big Labor political paybacks, the Foundation swiftly sprang into action requesting all documents showing exchanges between Labor Secretary Hilda Solis and union bosses and all documentation regarding policy enforcement concerning Big Labor, the pro-compulsory unionism group American Rights at Work, and ACORN. The Foundation also seeks all documents showing communications between AFL-CIO union lawyer Deborah Greenfield and her former bosses.
Greenfield, a member of Obama’s presidential transition team, is a high-ranking official inside Obama’s Labor Department. One item sending red flags is the fact that Greenfield is an AFL-CIO lawyer in a lawsuit challenging DOL union disclosure rules — the very disclosures that the Obama Administration intends to end. Greenfield and her fellow union partisans have fought for and succeeded in rolling back union disclosure rules that provide details to rank-and-file workers about the use and misuse of their forced union dues.
Freedom@Work readers may remember that the Foundation filed its disclosure demand (pdf) in April. Foundation attorneys are now reiterating that demand and gearing up to litigate if necessary. (To view a pdf copy of the appeal, click here.)
Upon entering office, President Barack Obama claimed his Administration would be transparent — but his Administration’s behavior has failed to keep the President’s word. The Obama Administration’s delay in this particular raises questions that DOL may be attempting to cover up some embarrassing ethics violations.
You can watch the Foundation’s video regarding the original FOIA request here on our Youtube.com channel.