Navy secretary violated Hatch Act by endorsing Biden for reelection, watchdog finds
CNN
Navy Secretary Carlos Del Toro violated the Hatch Act when he endorsed President Joe Biden while overseas in January, the Office of the Special Counsel found.
Navy Secretary Carlos Del Toro violated the Hatch Act when he endorsed President Joe Biden while overseas in January, the Office of the Special Counsel found. While speaking in his official capacity at an event at the Royal United Services Institute in the United Kingdom, Del Toro said, “The United Sates and the world need the mature leadership of President Biden,” according to OSC. Del Toro went on to say, “We cannot afford to have a president who aligns himself with autocratic dictators and rules whose interpretation of democratic principles is suspicious [at] best.” The Hatch Act is a federal law that prohibits federal employees from engaging in political activity while on duty or acting in an official capacity. In a subsequent television interview with the BBC, Del Toro said he had a “strong conviction” that Biden “has provided the mature leadership, both in the United States and stabilizing our economy, which was faced by many challenges early as he took office.” Del Toro then went on to question whether former President Donald Trump “abided by the core values of our country, protecting the freedoms of Americans and other people around the globe and protecting democracy itself. And when you have someone who doesn’t align to those core principles, it makes you wonder, you know, should you be supporting that individual?” In a letter addressed to the president, Special Counsel Hampton Dellinger wrote that Del Toro “impermissibly asserted his personal political campaign views during official agency business.”
Senate Democrats grilled Robert F. Kennedy Jr. over his various controversial statements including his stance on vaccines during his confirmation hearing to be President Donald Trump’s health and human services secretary, and most left feeling overwhelmingly unsatisfied by the answers they received.
A Nigerian man has been extradited to the US to face charges in the “sextortion” of a South Carolina teen who died by suicide in 2022. Prosecutors allege the scammer posed as a young woman, persuaded 17-year-old Gavin Guffey to send him nude photos and then threatened to publicize them if Guffey didn’t send money.