WASHINGTON â The US Office of Special Counsel announced Tuesday that White House aide Kellyanne Conway violated the Hatch Act on two occasions by âadvocating for and against candidatesâ in last yearâs Alabama Senate special election.
In a new report, the OSC special counsel, Henry Kerner, pointed to Conwayâs TV interviews conducted in her âofficial capacityâ in November and December of last year. The agency said Conway âimpermissibly mixed official government business with political views about candidates in the Alabama special election.â
One of the two interviews was on CNNâs âNew Day,â and the second was on Fox Newsâ âFox & Friends.â
In a letter to President Donald Trump, Kerner said he is referring her violations for the Presidentâs âconsideration of appropriate disciplinary action.â
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
During the âFox & Friendsâ interview November 20, Conway was introduced by the showâs hosts as a âcounselor to President Trumpâ and spoke from White House grounds. She said about Democratic Senate candidate Doug Jones: âFolks, donât be fooled. Heâll be a vote against tax cuts. Heâs weak on crime, weak on borders. Heâs strong on raising your taxes. Heâs terrible for property owners.â
During the âNew Dayâ interview December 6, Conway â again speaking from White House grounds and introduced by CNN anchor Chris Cuomo as âcounselor to President Trumpâ â said among other things that Jones will be a reliable vote âfor tax hikes,â âagainst border security,â âagainst national security,â âagainst the Second Amendmentâ and âagainst life,â according to the OSC report.
Conway went on to tell Cuomo that Jones is âout of step for Alabama voters, according to the President,â and that Trump âdoesnât want a liberal Democrat representing Alabama in the United States Senate.â
The Office of Special Counsel is unrelated to the investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller.
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