DNC CEO Resigns In Wake Of Email Controversy

After the Democratic National Committee discovered it had been hacked, it made the unusual move of quickly revealing the breach to the public -- including that the perpetrators were believed to be linked to the Russian government.
After the Democratic National Committee discovered it had been hacked, it made the unusual move of quickly revealing the breach to the public — including that the perpetrators were believed to be linked to the Russian government.
WASHINGTON — (CNN) The CEO of the Democratic National Committee will resign Tuesday in the wake of the committee’s hacked email controversy.
Amy Dacey is the highest-ranking official at the DNC to step aside due to the matter, a senior Democratic official said, but is not the only one.
The official did not provide further details.
Dacey is well-respected by Hillary Clinton’s campaign and the DNC circle, a source familiar with the resignation said.
Dacey’s resignation was first reported by Politico.
The committee is looking to clean house in the wake of leaked emails that appeared to show the committee favoring Clinton over Bernie Sanders during the primary.
Former DNC Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz resigned after the party’s convention last week as a result of the revelations.
DNC Vice Chairwoman Donna Brazile has stepped in as interim chair through the election.
The changes at the DNC come as the Clinton campaign is moving to take greater control of party headquarters in Washington and in states across the country.
Democrats are also trying to get ahead of the disclosure of more emails and internal documents from hacked computer systems, fearful of more embarrassing revelations.
The controversy began late last month when nearly 20,000 internal emails, released by WikiLeaks, were dumped on the Internet.
The emails between a handful of DNC officials revealed conversations about Sanders’ campaign, including one official suggesting he should be questioned about his faith to hurt him in key Southern states.
The emails are believed to have been released by Russian operatives after the DNC was hacked earlier this year.
The US has not made an official assessment of responsibility, but has acknowledged that experts agree the hack was committed by hackers working for the Russian military and intelligence.
Though the DNC and Democrats have focused on the implications of suspected Russian meddling in the US election, the emails have cast the organization in a negative light.
The White House hasn’t officially commented on Russia’s involvement, other than to say the FBI is investigating, but in a press conference on Tuesday, President Barack Obama downplayed the significance of the suspicion.
“If, in fact, Russia engaged in this activity, it’s just one on a long list of issues that me and Mr. (Vladimir) Putin talk about,” Obama said. “I don’t think that it wildly swings what is a tough, difficult relationship that we have with Russia right now.”

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