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07.17.2008 6:38 pm

Page, Mo GOP spar over e-mails

I KNOW we’re late getting in on this fight, but other journalistic tasks have intervened.

Yesterday, and again today, state Rep. Sam Page, a Democrat running for lieutenant governor, “called on Acting Governor Peter Kinder to release backup e-mail records being held in violation of the state’s open records law.”

Page was referring of course, to the e-mails that Gov. Matt Blunt’s staff has declined to provide — or as sought large payments for – to news outlets and the investigative team set up by Attorney General Jay Nixon, a Democrat, to probe how Blunt’s office has handled e-mails.

Kinder, also a Republican, is currently filling in for Blunt, who is out of state — and for 18 days, out of the country — for various matters.

 ”Peter Kinder is in a position to separate himself from a cover up
that has gone on for too long,” said Page.  “He will claim the guilt
for himself if he continues the Blunt administration’s policy of
secrecy in government.”

The Missouri Republican Party countered by filing a request for three years of Page’s e-mails.

“Representative Page has been grandstanding on the issue of the Sunshine Law and it’s time for him to demonstrate to Missourians where he really stands,” said Tina Hervey, the state GOP’s communications director. 

 “I suspect that Representative Page is in the same camp as many of his Democrat colleagues in that he talks about the Sunshine Law but doesn’t understand it and, like Jay Nixon, we suspect he and his staff are deleting e-mails.”

Hervey was referring to Blunt’s longstanding assertion that Nixon also is deleting e-mails that should be saved. Nixon’s staff says they save all e-mails that should be preserved.

In any event, Page said today he plans to comply with the Missouri GOP’s request.

Many Missouri lawmakers have acknowledged (I did a story last fall about this) that they use private e-mail accounts for state correspondence, and don’t necessarily make those documents available under open-records requests.

Another Democrat running for lieutenant governor, Mike Carter of St. Charles, also has jumped in the fray — and on behalf of Kinder. Sort of, anyway.

(Carter said he didn’t want to appear as defending Kinder.)

“This looks like a ploy on Page’s part,” said Carter, bringing up the state Supreme Court decision in the late 1980s that basically blocked then-Lt. Gov. Mel Carnahan, a Democrat, from taking any executive actions unwanted by then-Gov. John Ashcroft, a Republican, when the latter was out of town and the former was in charge. Sort of.

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5 comments

I think it would be great if the politicians we pay to work actually did something constructive like figuring out healthcare and education and stopped acting like a bunch of teenage girls. No wonder our country is going down the crapper. Is this the best we got?

— A CENTRIST
8:58 pm July 17th, 2008

Jo,

You said:
Many Missouri lawmakers have acknowledged (I did a story last fall about this) that they use private e-mail accounts for state correspondence, and don’t necessarily make those documents available under open-records requests.

You should ask Jeff but I think your story led to him filing a bill during the session on the sesion which requires that all emails on private e-mail accounts concerning public business to be forwarded to the custodian of records.
http://www.electjeffharris.com/news/pressrelease.php?prID=58

Jeff has also said that whether or not such legislation passes that “as Attorney General I am going to lead by example. I will not use Blackberies, whether or not they are publicly owned, or private e-mail addresses to circumvent the Sunshine Law. I will require my staff to forward any emails concerning public business to the designated custodian of records. The common practice of using private e-mail addresses to circumvent the Sunshine Law will stop.”

Jeff has a great sunshine law record. He sponsored the landmark Sunshine Law Electronic Upgrade Act in 2004, which helped bring the Sunshine Law up-to-date with modern technology. He sponsored the measure in conjunction with current Attorney General Jay Nixon. Take a look at the press that Jeff and Jay did before the 2004 session on this issue.
http://ago.mo.gov/photogallery/2003/112503sunshinelaw/sunshinelawupgrade.htm

Jeff filed seventeen bills this session and has more than twenty proposals for when he is the next attorney general. This is more than the other candidates combined. He has proposals on open government, CAFO’s, subprime mortgages, no call, utlity issues, spam, shaken babies, ethics reform, internet predators among others. Many of these have received favorable reviews from accross the state. Take a look at: http://www.electjeffharris.com/news/newsclips.php

A recent poll had him 10 percent above his closest opponent. He has more endorsements than the other candidates. But that isn’t what impressed me and caused me to endorse him. I believe that Jeff Harris will be the best attorney general the state has ever had.

— Jessica
10:34 pm July 17th, 2008

How come Jeff Harris didn’t enter the World Series of Poker?

Couldn’t he find his own ID?

— Scott Simon
7:02 am July 18th, 2008

Now we know that Sam Page is as immature and petty as Jay Nixon. That’s one good reason to vote for Mike Carter.

— Nick Kasoff
9:10 am July 18th, 2008

Political insider you are not, Scott Simon. The legislator who is dealing with ID issues is Sen. Jeff SMITH, not Rep. Jeff Harris. Get it right before you attack one of the most ethical guys around.

— accuracy, please
2:23 pm July 18th, 2008