Energy

Energy Department In Hot Water Over Anti-Obamacare Tweet

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The U.S. Government Accountability Office has determined that the Department of Energy violated the law when it tweeted an op-ed written by Secretary Rick Perry that was critical of Obamacare.

In a report issued Thursday, the GAO found that the Energy Department did, in fact, violate federal appropriations law in 2017 when it shared a health care-related column written by Perry.

“Energy did not provide any explanation or make any particularized showing that communicating about health care is part of its work or is related to accomplishing its statutory mission,” read a portion of the GAO decision that spanned over 2,500 words. More specifically, the GAO found that the tweet violated the “purpose statute” because it was an improper use of taxpayer funds.

The issue dates back all the way to July 2017, when the account @EnergyPressSec tweeted: “Time to discard the burdens and costs of Obamacare: @SecretaryPerry” and linked to an op-ed he wrote for Cleveland.com. Although Perry leads the Energy Department, the column his office tweeted out pertained to the U.S. health care system — not inherently related to energy or his department. The tweet immediately garnered controversy and was deleted later that day.

U.S. Rep. Frank Pallone — a New Jersey Democrat and ranking member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee — called on the GAO to look into the matter. The liberal congressman tweeted out his excitement over the investigative body’s findings.