Fired IG Walpin: A Wingnut Obama (Non-) Conspiracy
The Right has focused on the firing of an Inspector General (IG) Gerald Walpin who was assigned to the Corporation for National and Community Service (AmeriCorps). The WaPo posted links to 33 documents describing disagreements between the board of the service organization and IG Walpin. The right has suggested that the firing was in part due to a relation between President Obama and the Democratic mayor of San Francisco, former NBA stars Kevin Johnson, who is listed as an Obama acquaintance. Kevin Johnson admitted to misuse of funds received from AmeriCorps by an organization that he founded. Obama and the WH fired the IG as cover for Obama's friend mayor Kevin Johnson.
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/federal-eye/2009/07/gerald_walpin_documents.html#more
Steve Benen summarizes the controversy thusly:
THE ACTIVISTS WHO CAN'T STOP CRYING 'WOLF'.... When the Obama administration fired Gerald Walpin, the Bush-appointed inspector general of AmeriCorps, many on the right thought they'd discovered a new scandal. We've known for a while now that there's far less to the Walpin "controversy" than meets the eye, but Zachary Roth had a helpful item the other day noting why the story has quickly faded away.
As we noted yesterday, the Washington Post has published the documents turned over by the Corporation for National and Community Service to a Senate committee reviewing the White House's firing of AmeriCorps IG. Conservatives had charged that the IG, Gerald Walpin, was canned for going too hard after an Obama ally.
We've taken a look through the documents, and it's fair to say they offer a pretty clear picture of how and why the CNCS board lost confidence in Walpin. They jibe closely with what the White House and the board have already said -- to us, among others -- about the deterioration of the relationship between the IG and his agency. And they also make clear that this deterioration had begun long before the Obama administration existed. [...]
You've got to assume that this mass of evidence has put to rest once and for all the line that this was a politicized firing -- and indeed, the conservative outrage seems to have receded recently.
Yes, it has. Walpin was all the rage in conservative circles, right up until the "controversy" appeared baseless, and White House detractors were forced to move on.
But notice how this has happened quite a bit in the very young Obama administration. Remember when conservatives were convinced that the White House was closing car dealerships based on owners' political contributions? Or how about the not-so-scandalous Department of Homeland Security report about potentially violent extremists, which prompted some conservatives to call for Napolitano's resignation? Or about the EPA economist whose bizarre memo on global cooling was "suppressed"?
All of these caused widespread apoplexy among rabid anti-Obama activists. And all of these quickly fell apart after minimal scrutiny.
Kevin Drum had a very good item a couple of months ago, arguing that there's nothing especially wrong with far-right activists watching the administration like a hawk, doing what opposition parties do. And there's certainly something to be said for this -- if conservative bloggers want to hold elected officials' feet to the fire, more power to 'em. It's what being politically engaged is all about.
The problem is, these folks keep crying "wolf" without thinking it through. Conservative bloggers and talk-radio hosts are constantly finding scandalous schemes and outrageous abuses relating to the White House. Some are transparently ridiculous, and some take a few seconds on Google to debunk, but either way, they shout a lot of nonsense. And as a result, it's easy to start ignoring them.
Maybe the right's Ahabs can start being a little more selective?
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/archives/individual/2009_07/018947.php
Let's see what the Right comes up with next?
















Read Walpin's comments:
http://a.abcnews.go.com/images/Politics/PCIE_Response_Report_FINAL_5_20_09.pdf
and his original report to Congress here:
http://www.cncsig.gov/PDF/StHope/StHOPEFIN.pdf
Of course the Board didn't like an independent investigator at a time they were looking to cash in on new stimulus money for their organizations.
But most important, it looks like the Board from the docs WaPo provided was worried that Walpin would ask CUNY to return $16 million plus $800K in misused funds.
July 7, 2009 1:34 AM | Reply | Permalink