Featured News

Zinke’s sock tweet may have violated U.S. campaign law

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke on Tuesday deleted a photo of a sock he was wearing with President Donald Trump’s “Make America Great Again” campaign slogan on it after realizing he may have violated a law that prohibits federal employees from engaging in political activity.

Read: Kristi Noem Is Banned From 20% of South Dakota.

 

While attending a meeting of the Western Governors Association at South Dakota’s Mount Rushmore, Zinke tweeted a photo of his leg covered with a sock with Trump’s image on it and his Make America Great Again campaign slogan.

“Breaking in new socks on a hike with the governors today,” the official @SecretaryZinke Twitter account said.

Several tweeters and watchdog groups were quick to observe that donning campaign-style apparel while conducting official business is a violation of the Hatch Act.

The Campaign for Accountability responded to the @SecretaryZinke tweet with a link to a March 5 letter posted by the Office of Special Counsel (OSC), which updated its guidance on the Hatch Act in light of Trump confirming he will run for re-election.

“While on duty or in the workplace, employees may not: wear, display, or distribute items with the slogan ‘Make America Great Again’ or any other materials from President Trump’s 2016 or 2020 campaigns; use hashtags such as #MAGA or #ResistTrump in social media posts or other forums; or display non-official pictures of President Trump,” the letter said.

Later in the afternoon, Zinke replaced his earlier tweet on his official account with a photo of the same sock with “Make America Great Again” blacked out.

“Earlier I tweeted a pic of my new socks not realizing it had what could be viewed as a political slogan. I’ve deleted it and apologize for the mistake. I remain excited about all the incredible policy work POTUS is doing,” the tweet said.

Watchdog groups and Democratic lawmakers have been eying Zinke’s official and political activities.

Earlier this month, the Office of Special Counsel cleared Zinke of allegations of improper political activity under the Hatch Act when he spoke to the Las Vegas Golden Knights, a professional hockey team owned by one of his campaign donors, in June 2017.

In March, two Democratic lawmakers asked for an OSC investigation into whether Zinke violated the Hatch Act when he traveled to Pennsylvania to announce funding for a coal mine reclamation site in February. Several local Republican politicians attended, including Rick Saccone, who ran in a high-profile special election in the neighboring district just days later.

The Interior Dept. was not immediately available for comment.

(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici; Editing by Phil Berlowitz)

Recent Posts

Rachel Maddow Blasts Republicans For Showing Up At Trump’s Trial To Attack Judicial System

Rachel Maddow blasted Republicans for showing up at Trump's trial and attempting to damage or…

8 hours ago

Michael Cohen Names Katy Tur As One Of His Close Journalists For Trump

Michael Cohen outed MSNBC's Katy Tur as one of the journalists with whom he had…

16 hours ago

Corporate Media Ignores The Stock Market Hitting Historic 40,000 Under Biden

For the first time in history, the Dow Jones Industrial Average hit 40,000. It happened…

18 hours ago

Trump’s Lawyer Spins Out Of Control And Can’t Break Cohen’s Jury Connection

Trump's lawyer Todd Blanche is reportedly going on off on long speeches to please his…

19 hours ago

Trump Appears To Be Using Lauren Boebert To Violate Gag Order

Rep. Lauren Boebert showed up in court with Trump, and she is posting on line…

22 hours ago

Trump’s Lawyer Gets Smacked Down By Judge As Michael Cohen Cross Is A Disaster

Trump's lawyer Todd Blanche had multiple objections to his cross of Michael Cohen sustained, and…

22 hours ago