Department of Commerce Letter To Cummings

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£°C | unrren stares Department oF COMMERCE a fice of Legisiative and Intargovernmental Affairs Minion ie Br April 1, 20:5) ‘The Honorable Elijah E. Cummings Chairman Committee on Oversight and Reform USS. House of Representatives ‘Washington, D.C. 20515 Dear Chairman Cummings, | write in response to your March 29, 2019 letter and your chief counsel's March 28, 2019 email, both of which were received on that date at 5:29 PM and 6:25 PM, respectively. The Department remains entirely committed to an accommodating and responsive relationship with the Committe, The Department has honored its commitment, which is also a constitutional ‘obligation, despite the Committee's frequent and expansive request. As areminder, since your January 8, 2019 letter, the Department has produced over 11,500 pages of responsive documents, maintained a candid and accessible ine of communication with the Committee, and made many substantial accommodations to satisfy the Committee's interests. Perhaps most importantly, Secretary Ross voluntarily testified for nearly seven hours on March 14, 2019, and answered the Committee's questions on many various topics. But the Department's constitutional obligation to accommodate the Committee applies reciprocally and with equal measure to the Committee. Your letter has provided les than ene business day to comply with an ultimatum: the Department must waive its good faith and legally-grounded assertions of confidentiality and privilege or the Commitee will issue @ ‘subpoena, However, accommodation is not capitulation. The Department believes thatthe rush tw issue a subpoena is premature. First, the Department needs time to consider your letter and make a determination, and ‘your proposed one-day allotment is simply not enough. In addition, my staff has been preparing nine bureau heads (and myself) to testify before both the Senate and House Appropriations Committees on April 2, 2019 and April 3, 2019, respectively. The Department's sta is working at fll capacity on both its normal business and its multiple Congressional engagements, and I believe your one-day response demand is inconsistent with your constitutional obligation to accommodate the Department. We respectfully request adequate time to consider your letter and requests Moreover, you have not yet provided us withthe information we requested and need in ‘order to fly consider your requests regarding documents and interviews. In the Department's ‘March 26, 2019 letter, my office requested that you describe the Committee's particularized needs for each “priority document” and for each requested interview. While your March 29 letter provided six bullet points containing generalized topics of interest, the Department stil lacks information suficient to understand how your requests serve any eztimate legislative purpose. ‘As you know, tis information is necessary forthe Department to consider the best way to ‘accommodate the Committee while also protecting the Department's Executive Branch interest. ‘Moreover, tothe extent you provided some of the information the Department requested, the Department needs adequate time to consider the needs you have articulated forthe information in. question, In short, the Department has met and will continue to meet its constitutional ‘accommodation obligations. The Department respectfully requests that you abstain from ‘considering or issuing a subpoena while our good faith dialogue continues. ‘We appreciate the opportunity to assist with your inquiry. Ifyou have any additional questions, please contact me at (202)-482-3663, Sinegrly, Mithael PRE . Assistant Secretary for Legislative and Intergovernmental Affairs Ce: The Honorable Jim Jordan, Ranking Member

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