[Senate Hearing 108-591] [From the U.S. Government Printing Office] S. Hrg. 108-591 NOMINATION OF ALLEN WEINSTEIN ======================================================================= HEARING before the COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS UNITED STATES SENATE ONE HUNDRED EIGHTH CONGRESS SECOND SESSION ON THE NOMINATION OF ALLEN WEINSTEIN, OF MARYLAND, TO BE ARCHIVIST OF THE UNITED STATES, NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION __________ JULY 22, 2004 __________ Printed for the use of the Committee on Governmental Affairs U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 95-504 WASHINGTON : 2004 ____________________________________________________________________________ For Sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Internet: bookstore.gpo.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512-1800; (202) 512�091800 Fax: (202) 512�092250 Mail: Stop SSOP, Washington, DC 20402�090001 COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS SUSAN M. COLLINS, Maine, Chairman TED STEVENS, Alaska JOSEPH I. LIEBERMAN, Connecticut GEORGE V. VOINOVICH, Ohio CARL LEVIN, Michigan NORM COLEMAN, Minnesota DANIEL K. AKAKA, Hawaii ARLEN SPECTER, Pennsylvania RICHARD J. DURBIN, Illinois ROBERT F. BENNETT, Utah THOMAS R. CARPER, Delaware PETER G. FITZGERALD, Illinois MARK DAYTON, Minnesota JOHN E. SUNUNU, New Hampshire FRANK LAUTENBERG, New Jersey RICHARD C. SHELBY, Alabama MARK PRYOR, Arkansas Michael D. Bopp, Staff Director and Chief Counsel Johanna L. Hardy, Senior Counsel Joyce A. Rechtschaffen, Minority Staff Director and Counsel Jennifer E. Hamilton, Minority Research Assistant Amy B. Newhouse, Chief Clerk C O N T E N T S ------ Opening statements: Page Senator Collins.............................................. 1 Senator Lieberman............................................ 4 Senator Shelby............................................... 6 Senator Durbin............................................... 7 Senator Levin................................................ 7 Prepared statement: Senator Lautenberg........................................... 25 WITNESSES Thursday, July 22, 2004 Hon. Richard Lugar, a U.S. Senator from the State of Indiana..... 3 Allen Weinstein, to be Archivist of the United States, National Archives and Records Administration............................ 9 Alphabetical List of Witnesses Lugar, Hon. Richard: Testimony.................................................... 3 Weinstein, Allen: Testimony.................................................... 9 Prepared Statement........................................... 26 Biographical and professional information requested of nominees................................................... 32 Pre-hearing questionnaire for the Record..................... 44 Responses to pre-hearing questionnaire for the Record........ 53 Post-hearing questions from Senators......................... 123 APPENDIX Additional letters and prepared statements submitted for the Record Letter from Senator Levin to Mr. Carlin, dated July 21, 2004. 130 Letter to Senator Levin from Mr. Carlin, dated July 22, 2004. 131 Letter to the President from Mr. Carlin, dated December 19, 2003....................................................... 132 Letter to Senator Collins from Senator Hutchison, dated May 12, 2004................................................... 133 Letter to Senators Collins and Lieberman from Juanita M. Skillman, CRM, FAI, Chairman, ARMA International, dated April 27, 2004............................................. 134 ARMA International, prepared statement....................... 137 Society of American Archivists, prepared statement with an attachment................................................. 143 National Coalition for History, prepared statement with attachments................................................ 148 Letters to Senator Collins from: Sharon Babaian, President, National Council on Public History, dated July 16, 2004............................... 155 Barbara B. Kennelly, President and CEO, National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare, dated April 27, 2004 157 James S. Henderson, Director, Maine State Archives, dated May 13, 2004................................................... 158 Timothy J. Naftali, Associate Professor, Miller Center of Public Affairs, University of Virginia, dated May 4, 2004.. 160 Heather Gallegos-Rex, President, New Mexico Library Association, dated May 6, 2004............................. 162 Elspeth Davies Rostow, Stiles Professor Emerita, Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, University of Texas at Austin, dated May 6, 2004.................................. 163 Thomas F. Eagleton, Thompson Coburn LLP, St. Louis, Missouri, dated May 14, 2004......................................... 164 Daraka S. Cook, President, Maryland Library Association, dated June 9, 2004......................................... 166 Robert L. Livingston, The Ivingston Group, LLC, dated April 13, 2004................................................... 168 Susanne Hoeber Rudolph, President, American Political Science Association, and Michael A. Genovese, President, Presidency Research Group, a section of the American Political Science Association, dated July 26, 2004........................... 170 NOMINATION OF ALLEN WEINSTEIN ---------- THURSDAY, JULY 22, 2004 U.S. Senate, Committee on Governmental Affairs, Washington, DC. The Committee met, pursuant to notice, at 3:30 p.m., in room SD-342, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Hon. Susan M. Collins, Chairman of the Committee, presiding. Present: Senators Collins, Shelby, Lieberman, Levin, and Durbin. OPENING STATEMENT OF CHAIRMAN COLLINS Chairman Collins. The Committee will come to order. This afternoon, the Committee on Governmental Affairs is holding a hearing to consider the nomination of Allen Weinstein to be the Archivist of the United States. As anyone who loves history knows, the Archivist holds an important and challenging position. As head of the National Archives and Records Administration, the Archivist is responsible for maintaining the historical documents of our country and for ensuring that those and other government records are preserved for the public. Currently, the National Archives holds an astounding 6 billion pieces of paper, 18 million aerial photographs, 11 million still pictures, 3 million architectural and engineering plans, 2 million maps and charts, and hundreds of thousands of motion pictures and audio and video recordings. The Archivist provides guidance and assistance to Federal officials on the management of records to determine their retention and disposition. He must decide where to place those records with sufficient value to warrant their continued preservation. Not surprisingly, the National Archives is running out of storage space. However, space is one of only many challenges facing the National Archives. While rapidly advancing information technology has been a boon for business and government alike, it has created a particularly difficult problem for the Archivist. Ensuring that electronic documents created using today's software and computer programs will be accessible 50 or 100 years from now creates novel technological and archival issues. The current Archivist, Governor John Carlin, has been working on this problem for several years and the National Archives will soon begin the design competition phase for its electronic record archives. Whoever replaces him must continue to make this significant project a high priority. The Archivist is also responsible for making grants to non- Federal institutions to support historical documentation through the National Historical Publications and Records Commission. In Maine, for example, 23 museums, libraries, colleges, State and local agencies have received more than $1 million in grants to improve the preservation of, and access to, their historic records. It is vitally important to such institutions throughout the Nation that the Archivist ensure that this program is adequately funded. The Archivist must also be able to work with key stakeholders. Other archivists, historians, records managers, and ordinary citizens all rely upon the National Archivist. During our review of this important nomination, the Committee has received a significant amount of input from organizations such as the National Coalition for History, ARMA International, and others including officials from the State of Maine Archives. The Committee staff has met with and consulted extensively with various groups and individuals and I continue to welcome their insights and advice. Many stakeholders expect the Archivist to be the advocate for open access to government records. At times, this role can prove to be difficult. The Archivist must understand the concerns of the public, of historians and other stakeholders and be committed to working to improve public access. The Archivist must believe in and adhere to the core mission of the National Archives which is to ensure ``for the citizens and the public servant, for the President and for the Congress and for the courts, ready access to essential evidence.'' The National Archives is a public trust that documents our national experience and the activities of our government. Its mission is critical to a free and open society because it allows us another means of evaluating the actions of our government. For these reasons, it is important that the Archivist not only have the skills needed to manage the National Archives but also possess a knowledge of relevant issues such as records management, and demonstrate a commitment to the core mission of the agency. As a professor, scholar, and author, Professor Weinstein has a multidimensional perspective on the importance of the mission of the National Archives. In addition, his work with organizations such as the Center for Democracy, and the International Foundation for Election Systems demonstrates his capacity to manage and address complex issues. I look forward to hearing the professor's views on the many issues that he would face if he is confirmed. I note that he is accompanied today by one of our most distinguished members who is going to introduce him. I will now turn to Senator Lugar, for whom I have such great respect, in a moment. But first, I would be happy to turn to the Ranking Member of the Committee, Senator Lieberman, who managed to arrive just in time not to hear any of my eloquent opening statement. Senator Lieberman. I was receiving the vibrations as I walked over here. I am going to hold and I am happy to yield to our respected and dear colleague, Senator Lugar. Chairman Collins. Senator Lugar, I will call on you and then we will resume opening statements by the Committee Members. I know that Senator Shelby is also a friend of Professor Weinstein and is eager to make comments as well. Senator Lugar. TESTIMONY OF HON. RICHARD LUGAR, A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF INDIANA Senator Lugar. Thank you very much, Madam Chairman and Members of the Committee. I appreciate this opportunity. I want to testify on behalf of my friend Allen Weinstein from a perspective of fairly recent history, that is within the last two decades. I first met Professor Weinstein when he was a professor at Boston University, but had just become the head of the Center for Democracy in about 1985. That was a big year for me. That was my first year as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee. We were already hearing from young people in the State Department, among them Rich Armitage and Paul Wolfowitz, other familiar names who are still on the scene, that there were problems in terms of our relationship with President Marcos. Those developed further throughout the year and when I was in Guatemala observing the election at the behest of President Reagan I got word that on television in the United States, President Marcos was calling a snap election in the Philippines. But it was a challenge to our country, and he said, in essence, and he heard a lot of criticism, but now it was put up or shut up. He was going to win and win big. And he invited us to come over and observe this. Now the problem of observation was a technical one. Before falling into this, Secretary Shultz suggested to me--and the thought was that I would head another delegation to observe this election--we had better find out where our footing was. So for this I called on my good friend Professor Weinstein. He did some reconnaissance of the Philippines election situation which led us to ask some probing questions of the embassy back here. Namely, how close to the polls could we get? Who could we interview? As a matter of fact, what were the rules of the game in terms of the election laws? And what kind of security would our delegates have? Because the President intended to name 30 people from business, from politics. Senator Kerry and Senator Cochran were both parts of that delegation and are still in the Senate, and Jack Murtha from Pennsylvania was a part of that situation. So we asked Allen and his group to find out for us, and they asked the right questions so we asked the right questions. In essence, we established a presence, we observed the election. It was covered by enormous fraud and abuse, which we reported before leaving the Philippines fairly abruptly thereafter, and came directly back to report to the President, who at first was very skeptical and said he saw fraud and abuse on both sides. But without relating all the problems, by Saturday the President decided the fraud and abuse was principally on one side and instructed his friend, Senator Paul Laxalt to give the famous words, ``cut and cut clean,'' to Ferdinand Marcos up in room S-407 as we all observed this. Now at that point we asked Allen Weinstein to go back to the Philippines for a very important scholarly reconnaissance to find out exactly what were the voting totals, what had occurred in all the precincts, and which anecdotally, the people had turned over the wagons literally and come up with scores of 400 to zero, or what have you. So that there was not a very good historical record of physically what had occurred in that race as well as other races on that day. He performed in an exemplary fashion, as you might imagine. This is all a part of history, and on the basis of this President Reagan changed our foreign policy by saying that we will no longer make a distinction between totalitarians on the left and authoritarians on the right. Both are enemies of democracy, and we will oppose both. That was a very significant change for President Reagan and it came really out of this experience, and out of the documentation. Not just a single observation, but a scholarly effort of published work. Allen helped me make certain all the recollections I have in my book, ``Letters to the Next President,'' on the Philippines election were right as we both understood it. So in a contemporary way we recorded that part of American history. Subsequently, I continued to serve on Allen's board until it was in fact merged into IFES, as you have suggested, Madam Chairman, and the board meetings were always stimulating. They always brought in Members of Congress, and the academic community. A good number of legislatures in Latin America and elsewhere have their genesis from the beginnings of the Center for Democracy, and the instructions, the materials, as well as judicial conferences that Allen Weinstein sponsored with the center here in this country as well as elsewhere each year. So for all these reasons, you can understand the depth of my regard and my friendship for this remarkable American. I am most hopeful the Committee will give him very favorable consideration. Chairman Collins. Thank you very much, Senator Lugar, for being here. Your recommendation means a great deal to this Committee. I know your schedule is very busy so I am sure that the members would join me in excusing you from listening to their eloquent opening statements as well. Senator Lugar. Thank you very much. Chairman Collins. Thank you. Senator Lieberman. OPENING STATEMENT OF SENATOR LIEBERMAN Senator Lieberman. Thank you, Madam Chairman, both for the introduction and that adjective eloquent. I am going to ask that my full statement be put in the record and welcome Dr. Weinstein. Nine years ago when this Committee considered the nomination of then-Governor Carlin to be Archivist the nomination attracted what was to me at the time a surprising amount of interest and controversy. Today we are considering the nomination of Dr. Allen Weinstein for the same position, and again there is some interest and some controversy. This is actually a week in which the Archives have probably received more attention, thanks to Sandy Berger, than they have in a long time. So the limelight is unexpectedly on this usually quiet and non-controversial agency of our government. The position of Archivist is anything but ordinary, although it is usually not in the limelight. Senator Glenn, our former chairman and friend once said, and maybe said it best, ``that the Archivist is the guardian of our heritage,'' our national heritage, because the Archivist ensures the Nation's historical records are kept safe, never altered, and certainly not illegally destroyed. The Archives are now in the midst of a great transition. Along with all Federal agencies, National Archives and Records Administration must manage a rapidly increasing volume of electronic records. The Archives not only must preserve raw data, they must ensure that the best methods for reading and recalling that data are preserved as well, so that not just next year or in 10 years, but forever the American people will have access to their heritage. The next Archivist will also have to deal with the sensitive issues surrounding Executive Order 13233 issued by President Bush in November 2001 regarding release of presidential documents. As you know, Dr. Weinstein, the order has drawn some criticism on the basis that it undermines the Presidential Records Act and, among other things, diminishes, some would say takes the Archivist out of the process of deciding what documents should be released, and gives the former or sitting Presidents very large sway and time to review requests for the release of those documents. I hope that is a subject that we can talk about today. But I welcome Dr. Weinstein, an accomplished historian, which incidentally is a profession several past Archivists have shared and it certainly seems to prepare you for this position. An author, a teacher, leader of a private non-profit organization that helped emerging democracies around the world foster open government. And in the spirit of full disclosure I should add, I was privileged to be a member of the board of that organization for some time. So I welcome you. I thank you for your willingness to serve, and I look forward to your testimony today. [The prepared statement of Senator Lieberman follows:] PREPARED OPENING STATEMENT OF SENATOR LIEBERMAN Thank you Madam Chairman, and welcome Dr. Weinstein. We appreciate your being with us today. Nine years ago, when this Committee considered the nomination of then-Governor Carlin to be Archivist, the nomination attracted a significant amount of interest and some controversy. Today we are considering the nomination of Allen Weinstein for the same position, and again there is significant interest and some controversy. This surprises people who consider the Archivist's job to be an ordinary one, far removed from the limelight and the daily tug of current events. But the position of Archivist of the United States is anything but ordinary. The Archivist safeguards the very nature of democratic government. He works with the President, the Congress, the courts, and all the Federal agencies to determine what government records should be saved, who controls those records, how government can preserve them for historical purposes, and how and when the public should gain access to them. The Archivist, then, is our national record keeper. His is a public trust. Both government and the public depend on the National Archives for a wide range of information. The National Archives preserves the records citizens rely on to trace their families' history. It also maintains the records historians use to evaluate the government and the people who serve within it. From those records we judge our predecessors, just as succeeding generations will judge us. Former Senator Glenn may have said it best when he noted that ``the Archivist is the guardian of our heritage.'' He ensures this nation's historical records are kept safe, never altered or illegally destroyed. The National Archives, however, is, in many ways, on the cusp of a monumental transition, and the next Archivist must be prepared to lead the agency through this transformation. Just as all Federal agencies do, the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) must manage a rapidly increasing volume of electronic records. E-mails, electronic documents, and World Wide Web site pages all present special archival challenges because the technologies behind them are constantly changing. The Archives not only must preserve raw data, it must ensure the best methods for reading and recalling that data are preserved as well, so that 10, 20, or 100 years into the future, American citizens will still have access to their heritage. The Archivist must also be prepared to face some of the same management challenges other Federal agencies are confronting. He must be able to lead a large and diverse workforce into the 21st Century. He must also cope with the retirement of experienced personnel and be able to recruit and retain new employees with the appropriate training. The next Archivist will also have to wade into the sensitive issues surrounding Executive Order 13233, issued by President Bush in November 2001, regarding release of presidential documents. the order has drawn criticism for undermining the Presidential Records Act, which provides for the public release of presidential records. The Executive Order, among other things, essentially takes the Archivist out of the process of deciding what documents should be released, gives the former and sitting President potentially unlimited time to review requests, and shifts the legal burden of challenging decisions to withhold documents to the requestor of the documents. This is a subject I am sure we'll spend some time discussing this afternoon. Allen Weinstein is not an archivist by trade. He is an historian, an honorable, indeed significant profession several past Archivists have shared. He is an author and teacher, and was the leader of a private non-profit organization that helped emerging democracies around the world foster open government. Concerns have been raised, as you know, in connection with Dr. Weinstein's historical pursuits. Some have complained that the previous Archivist, John Carlin, was pressured to resign or that Allen Weinstein was an opponent of open access because he kept some of his own records and files closed. The Committee has explored these issues and will continue to debate them today. Again, I welcome Dr. Weinstein, and look forward to his testimony before this Committee as we consider his nomination and the interesting, sometimes controversial issues confronting the National Archives and the ``guardian of our heritage,'' as we enter the 21st Century. Chairman Collins. Thank you. Senator Shelby. OPENING STATEMENT OF SENATOR SHELBY Senator Shelby. Madam Chairman, I want to thank you for holding this hearing today to consider the nomination of Dr. Allen Weinstein to be the Archivist of the United States. Dr. Weinstein, as you probably know, is a noted historian, respected educator, renowned author and founder, president and the CEO of the Center for Democracy. Dr. Weinstein has had an outstanding career and a demonstrated record of service in non- partisan and bipartisan organizations over the past two decades. Throughout his career he has conducted a significant amount of scholarly research and published a number of works that brought him in direct contact with vast amounts of historic documents and information. Throughout his years, Madam Chairman, whether as a writer or as an educator, Dr. Weinstein's reliance on historical documents has bolstered his understanding of the importance of maintaining the most accurate, accessible and thorough historical records in order to connect citizens to their government. I believe that Dr. Weinstein will serve our Nation honorably and with the utmost respect for materials that he will be responsible for safeguarding. These materials are precious and irreplaceable national treasures and it is imperative they be preserved and protected. I thank you again for holding this hearing. I look forward to supporting this nomination. I think it is a great nomination. Chairman Collins. Thank you. Senator Durbin. OPENING STATEMENT OF SENATOR DURBIN Senator Durbin. Thank you, Madam Chairman, and welcome, Dr. Weinstein, to the Committee. I have to agree with Senator Lieberman, rarely is there this much intrigue in a nomination, particularly for someone to the Archives. Having had a chance to sit down and speak with you, I have no question in my mind that you are thoroughly qualified to fill the chair of Archivist. The question in the minds of many of us is whether that chair is empty. And if it is empty, why is it empty? What decision was made and who made it to tell Governor Carlin it was time to go? I suppose you may know nothing about that and perhaps questions in this Committee will raise that issue. But it is an unusual circumstance and I do not know, God forbid, that politics may be involved in it. But it does not take away from the fact that you bring extraordinary qualifications. So I am looking forward to the questions and your responses. Thank you, Madam Chairman. Chairman Collins. Thank you. Senator Levin. OPENING STATEMENT OF SENATOR LEVIN Senator Levin. Madam Chairman, thank you very much. Let me join you and the other Members of our Committee in greeting Mr. Weinstein here and welcoming him. As has been stated by you, Madam Chairman, and other Members of the Committee, and Senator Lieberman, the National Archives are a national treasure, a repository of critical information illuminating the Nation's development, our understanding of our history, and our view of ourselves. The Archives merit our full attention and protection. They were created 20 years ago by the National Archives and Records Administration Act of 1984. The report issued by this Committee at the time said that if the decisions made at the Archives were made ``arbitrarily or motivated by political rather than professional considerations, the historical record could be impoverished, even distorted.'' The report explained that the law established the Archives as an independent agency in order to ``provide the best insurance that archival and records management decisions would be made on a professional basis unaffected by political considerations or other extraneous factors.'' Just as decisions at the National Archives must be based on professional, non-political considerations, it is critically important that the process of selecting a new Archivist follow the same path. Some of the events leading up to the proposed replacement for the current Archivist trouble me deeply. The nominee, Dr. Weinstein, stated in written answers to questions sent him by the Committee that he first met with the White House about his possible nomination on September 23, 2003. He stated that he was then asked by the Office of Presidential Personnel to fill out certain forms required for the nomination process during late November and early December 2003. Until now, it has been unclear whether the process of seeking out a new Archivist had been initiated by the White House or at the suggestion of the current Archivist, John Carlin. I recently decided just to ask Mr. Carlin directly, and I sent him a letter asking whether he initially approached the Administration about resigning from his position or whether the Administration had initially approached him. Mr. Carlin responded, ``the Administration initially approached me. On Friday, December 5, 2003, the Counsel to the President called me and told me the Administration would like to appoint a new Archivist. I asked why, and there was no reason given.'' Mr. Carlin decided, obviously, to go along with the request. Two weeks after the initial contact from the White House, on December 19, 2003, Mr. Carlin sent a letter to the President stating that by the Fall of 2004 he would look for other opportunities. He stated he would submit his resignation upon the swearing-in of his successor. I am not sure that Mr. Carlin was aware at the time he wrote this letter his potential replacement had already begun the paperwork needed to complete the nomination process. Congress intended for the Archivist to be a non-political position. The law authorizes the Archivist to serve for an indefinite term. If a President initiates the removal of a sitting Archivist he is required by law to inform Congress of the cause for removal. In this case, it was apparently the White House who asked Mr. Carlin to remove himself and gave no apparent reason other than wanting to name his replacement. Mr. Carlin may be willing to leave at the request of the White House, but we have an obligation to protect the objectivity of the Archives and to find out why the White House asked him to leave. I make no suggestion, by the way, that Mr. Weinstein played any role in the request of Mr. Carlin to resign, because I know he did not--because he told me he did not. The issue is totally separate from Mr. Weinstein's qualifications, which are high qualifications, from his experience which is extensive. But it seems to me that it is essential that this Committee now request the White House to let us know whether in fact they requested the resignation of Mr. Carlin, and if so, why. That again is a separate issue from Mr. Weinstein's qualifications and I think it is important that we talk to him about his vision and his qualifications, but that we not simply overlook the importance of finding out how is it and why is it that the White House requested the current Archivist to resign. The National Archives Vision Statement states that the National Archives is a ``public trust on which our democracy depends. . . . It enables officials and agencies to review their actions and helps citizens hold them accountable.'' Part of that accountability, it seems to me, is that we do make that inquiry of the White House, and I will be talking to the Chairman and to the Ranking Member about that. I just received the letter today. I tried to get it to our Chairman this afternoon and to the Ranking Member. I do not know even, frankly, if they got a copy of the letter. Chairman Collins. Just now. Senator Levin. But in any event, it just struck me literally yesterday, I just wanted to find out directly from the Archivist as to was this his idea or not? And if it is not his idea, I think we should find out the source of the idea, to protect the objectivity and independence and integrity of the Archives. So that is, again, a separate matter which I am happy to keep separate from questions of Mr. Weinstein, because again I know he should not be caught up in this issue, but it is an issue which needs to be resolved. Again, I welcome him to the Committee and I look forward to his answering questions about his own views, vision, and qualifications. Chairman Collins. Thank you. Allen Weinstein has filed responses to a biographical and financial questionnaire,\1\ answered pre-hearing questions submitted by the Committee,\2\ and had his financial statements reviewed by the Office of Government Ethics. Without objection, this information will be made part of the hearing record with the exception of the financial data which are on file and available for public inspection in the Committee's offices. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- \1\ The biographical information appears in the Appendix on page 32. \2\ Pre-hearing questions and responses in sequential order appear in the Appendix on pages 44 and 53 respectively. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Our Committee rules require that all witnesses at nomination hearings give their testimony under oath so, Professor, I would ask that you stand and raise your right hand. [Witness sworn.] Chairman Collins. Thank you. Professor, before I ask you if you have a statement you would like to make, I am told that you do have members of your family here with you and I would ask you to introduce them to the Committee. Mr. Weinstein. I would like you to meet my wife, Adrienne Dominguez, and my son, Andrew Weinstein. Chairman Collins. Thank you. We welcome you here today. Professor, you can proceed with your statement. Mr. Weinstein. May I introduce one more person? Chairman Collins. I am sorry. I had been told there are just two. Mr. Weinstein. One of your former colleagues in the Congress and my friend, Barbara Kennelly, is here in the back. Congresswoman Kennelly? Well, she was here in the back. I don't know where she is now. Chairman Collins. You should have stopped when you were ahead. [Laughter.] Mr. Weinstein. It has been a problem, Chairman. Chairman Collins. Professor, proceed please. TESTIMONY OF ALLEN WEINSTEIN,\3\ TO BE ARCHIVIST OF THE UNITED STATES, NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION Mr. Weinstein. Thank you. Chairman Collins, Senator Lieberman, Senators on the Governmental Affairs Committee, Committee staff, ladies and gentlemen: I am honored and humbled by the President's nomination of me to become the next Archivist of the United States. Should this Committee and the full Senate confirm the nomination, I will devote all of my effort and energy to addressing the range of responsibilities assigned to the Archivist as the head of the National Archives and Records Administration. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- \3\ The prepared statement of Mr. Weinstein appears in the Appendix on page 26. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- I want to thank Senator Lugar, a friend and mentor, for having introduced me to the Committee. I want to thank you, Chairman Collins, and all of the Senators on the Committee, along with your able staffs; no nominee could have been treated with greater fairness. If confirmed, I look forward to working with the Members and staff of this Committee in a completely cooperative manner. The Archivist of the United States essentially works for the American people across partisan lines and not, regardless of which administration nominates the person, for a particular President or political party. Thus, the Archivist must display at all times scrupulous independence and a devotion to the laws and principles which govern the responsibilities of the office. It should be of some help in this connection that for two decades, in this city and throughout the country and the world, I have led an independent, bipartisan existence while developing a range of programs and initiatives with Members of Congress, their staffs, and administration officials of both parties. I would continue that independent and bipartisan approach to my work as Archivist of the United States, the designated custodian of America's essential government ``records that defy the tooth of time.'' I note with special pride the Center for Democracy's bipartisan Board of directors which, at various times was honored to include Senators Kay Bailey Hutchison, John Kerry, Joseph Lieberman, Richard Lugar, Sam Nunn, Charles Robb, and former Senator William Brock. With the Committee's indulgence, I would like to spend a moment reviewing in summary my qualifications for the post of Archivist. My answers to the Committee's biographical and policy questionnaires, which you already have and which I have appended to this statement, expand on these comments. First, I believe that my several careers--as a teacher and scholar of American history, a global democracy activist for two decades, and an NGO administrator for that same period-- constitute a varied yet significant professional background, one capable of assuming quickly and effectively the Archivist's roles and responsibilities. Second, my specific activities over four decades as an educator, historian, and writer should be noted: As the holder of three long-term professorships--Smith College, Georgetown, and Boston University; author or co-author of six books well received by reviewers, of eight edited collections, and of dozens of articles; a user of and advisor to various research archives; and an award-winning recipient of fellowships and lectureships. Third, having witnessed over almost two decades as President of the Center for Democracy in dozens of dictatorships or transitional nations the destructive impact of non-democratic habits of mind, history, and political behavior, I am keenly aware of the priceless constitutional heritage enjoyed by Americans. This awareness instills a fierce desire to protect that heritage and, in doing so, to educate Americans in the meaning and importance of our pivotal documents. In short, the Archivist's role in preserving and disseminating our Nation's ``essential evidence'' is one for which both the global and American aspects of my past experiences have prepared me. Fourth and finally, the bipartisan background of my international work during the past 20 years, first in developing the National Endowment for Democracy and then in creating and managing the Center for Democracy, working closely in these decades with the U.S. Congress and administrations of both parties, has provided a useful context for assuming leadership and supervision of NARA's various components. The Committee's policy questionnaire asked, among other things, what challenge NARA would confront in the period ahead. If confirmed as Archivist, I would undertake both an initial set of briefings by NARA's management team and other senior staff and another briefing by key NARA stakeholders to gain their assessments of current systemwide challenges and priorities. I believe this will allow a more cost-effective and efficient use of NARA's budget. Until then, I would place the following group of clear challenges and priorities in any list of concern to the Archivist of the United States: Providing effective post-September 11 security for the documents, materials, and staff at the Washington, DC, and College Park NARA headquarters and throughout NARA's installations (i.e., presidential libraries, regional records centers, et al.); Completing the Redesign of the Federal Records Management Initiative; Moving forward NARA's major electronic records initiative (i.e., Electronic Records Archive (ERA), the Electronic Records Management (ERM), Records Lifecycle Business Process Re- engineering (BPR), et al.); Expanding NARA's educational and public programming not only in Washington but throughout the regional records centers and the presidential library system; Supporting the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC) in its important work at effective budgetary levels; Addressing major internal administrative concerns at NARA, including (but not limited to) the loss of experienced personnel due to retirement, aging facilities, deteriorating records, and administrative backlogs; And, finally, strengthening cooperation with the presidential library system while creating effective liaison with State and other non-Federal archival groups. Once fully briefed, however, undoubtedly other priorities will join this initial list. Chairman Collins and Members of the Committee, I want to call to your attention the fact that several archival and historical organizations have raised concerns regarding insufficient consultation with their groups prior to this nomination, concerns--they were quick to point out--more about the process of selection itself than about the nominee. I would mention, as a historical note, that many of these same concerns--and others--were also expressed when President Clinton appointed Governor Carlin as Archivist in 1995. To address these concerns, one of my important goals, if confirmed as Archivist, would be to maintain an open dialogue with all of NARA's key stakeholders and partners, and since my nomination in April, I have attempted informally but vigorously to reach out to many of these groups. I have met with the heads of over a dozen archival and historical organizations and with a number of other influential figures involved in NARA-related activities seeking not endorsements but dialogue. At these meetings, mostly I have listened and opened lines of communication; if confirmed, I would continue to strengthen mechanisms of consultation with these and other stakeholding groups. They are all valuable members of the NARA family. Since these meetings, one of the concerned archival groups, the important Council of State Historical Records Coordinators, your State Archivists, unanimously endorsed my nomination as Archivist. In short, I have been working hard and steadily to keep open communications with the many concerned NARA stakeholders and, as Archivist, will try to engage all segments of NARA's constituent communities, both in and out of government. In closing, I want to share with the Committee two personal stories of my encounters with the three great ``Charters of Freedom'' housed in the National Archives Building on Pennsylvania Avenue. The first occurred in Boston in 1987, when I was invited to deliver the 216th annual Fourth of July Oration at historic Faneuil Hall. I called my remarks ``The Declaration Meets the Constitution: A Bicentennial Fourth of July,'' and the talk concerned the efforts at Philadelphia's Constitutional Convention--in the end successful efforts--to avoid a deadlock in its deliberations. The ``Great Compromise'' eventually agreed upon confirmed the convergence of the 1776 and the 1787 guarantees of freedom, which even today balance in the American Republic the rights of citizenship and its obligations. Three years later, in 1990, the Center for Democracy hosted the new President of a democratic Hungary, Arpad Goncz, who spoke in front of the Bill of Rights at the National Archives, in a ceremony commemorating its Bicentennial, on the global influence of that document. The Faneuil Hall talk had confirmed for me the unbreakable links among the three great founding documents of our ``first new nation'' in guaranteeing the rights and responsibilities of our people. President Goncz's remarks called attention to the ideological and geographic reach of this country's principles, from its beginnings, in a world filled with despots, now as then, in which ordinary people dream of and fight for freedom, individual rights, and the rule of law. Together, the two occasions also symbolize for me the awesome responsibilities placed on the Archivist of the United States as a designated custodian of America's national memory. For the Archivist, this role is the result of his obligation to preserve and assure timely and maximum access to our governmental records in the evolving historical saga of the American people. On a personal note, as the son of pre-World War I Russian- Jewish immigrants, if confirmed, I would view my work as Archivist as an optimal way of giving back to this great country a small measure of what the United States of America has given to me and to my family. Chairman Collins and Members of the Committee, I am keenly aware of the responsibilities involved in the position for which I have been nominated, and I welcome the challenge, Senators, as I now welcome your questions and comments. Thank you very much. Chairman Collins. Thank you, Professor. There are three standard questions that the Committee asks of all nominees. First, is there anything you are aware of in your background which might present a conflict of interest with the duties of the office to which you have been nominated? Mr. Weinstein. No, Chairman. Nothing that I can think of. Chairman Collins. Second, do you know of anything, personal or otherwise, that would in any way prevent you from fully and honorably discharging the responsibilities of the office? Mr. Weinstein. No, I do not. Chairman Collins. And, third, do you agree without reservation to respond to any reasonable summons to appear and testify before any duly constituted committee of Congress if you are confirmed? Mr. Weinstein. Absolutely. Chairman Collins. We will now have a round of questions limited to 6 minutes each. Professor, in your responses to this Committee's written questions, you cited former Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan's writings on the need to combat excessive government secrecy. You also declared your lifelong commitment to what Senator Moynihan called ``a culture of openness.'' You went on to state that, as Archivist, it would be your duty to speak out plainly as a primary advocate for access. Mr. Weinstein. Right. Chairman Collins. There are, however, some scholars who have questioned your commitment to public access to important records. How would you respond to their concerns? Which I know you are aware of. Mr. Weinstein. Well, I am aware of them. Let me take that in two parts, if I may, and I will try to be brief. The four most dangerous words in the English language are ``I will be brief,'' but I will try. First, on my record on access, back in 1972, when I sued, with the assistance of the ACLU, the FBI for its files, this was no easy matter, and I won't go into the details except to say that we were very delighted when the suit was finally won in 1975. My lawsuit opened FBI files for the first time records of historical interest, not just to myself but to any scholar, any researcher who wanted those records. The release set a precedent, the FOIA release. Those files, those FBI files, are deposited at the Harry Truman Library. I have brought other collections to bear at two libraries, for example, the Herbert Solow papers. I brought them from Mexico to the Hoover Library. They are a Hiss-related collection. I worked with Boris Yeltsin's Commission on Archives in the 1990's to produce the first English-language translation of the first Russian archival publication that was designed for a mass audience. I worked with the Russian Government to try to improve their access relationships at the time. I have helped the Mary Baker Eddy Library in Boston open the papers of Mrs. Eddy which had been closed for over 100 years. When the new library opened, those papers were opened to all scholars, and I was one of the leading forces in that process. My commitment has been constant. I could mention other things. I worked on seminars with my friends in the Russian Federation at which documents were opened. There are a number of instances I could mention of that kind. There is one incident, one issue that critics of my record have brought up, and that is the issue of what to do about the fact that I have not put my personal records and my personal memos of the Hiss case into public display. Chairman Collins. Let me follow up with a question on that particular case. Mr. Weinstein. That is fine. Chairman Collins. There has been concern expressed by some scholars who say that you failed to make available for review by other scholars the notes and records that you relied upon in writing two of your well-known historical works: the ``Perjury'' book and ``The Haunted Wood'' book. You had told the Committee staff that, in fact, you planned to donate the notes that you relied on in writing the ``Perjury'' book, regarding the Hiss-Chambers case, to the Hoover Institution. Do you plan to impose restrictions that would limit public access to those notes once they are donated. Mr. Weinstein. No. Madam Chairman, I have signed the deed of gift already to the Hoover Institution, and the hope is that these papers will all be available by early next year, at the least. I have got to get them out there. I have got to collect them. Archivists have to process them, and then they will be all available. But I do want to point something out. There are two separate instances, if I may spend a moment or two on this. Chairman Collins. Certainly. Mr. Weinstein. When I started my book on the Alger Hiss case--I began thinking that Mr. Hiss may have been innocent. I changed my mind as the case went along and as I read the FBI files and other materials. I found no conspiracy. I found a great deal of confusion in the FBI. But I did not find that anyone had conspired against him to convict him. And so I wrote the book that way. The book was controversial. It was a very tense period. I was sued by a gentleman who had been a former member of the Communist Party who had been encouraged to sue me for misstating his situation. Maybe I did, maybe I didn't, but it was a lawsuit against myself and the New Republic magazine and Alfred A. Knopf Publishers. It was settled out of court. But I was threatened with other lawsuits, and on advice of counsel, my counsel said, well, this is not a time to be giving your papers to anyone who wants to look at your private papers. In retrospect, I think I probably should have donated them afterwards, because the historical verdict seemed very clear. My book was well received, and there hasn't been another complete book on the case in the period since 1978. There was another edition of ``Perjury'' that came out in the late 1990's. So those are going to the Hoover Institution, every last bit of documentation, and people can make what they want of them. By the way, my book was used as one of the major sources for Sam Tanenhaus' brilliant biography of Whittaker Chambers. I gave him total access to the papers. I have given others access to the papers. ``The Haunted Wood,'' I still don't know to this day-- people ask me what arrangements my publisher made at the time with the KGB's retired agents organization. There was an arrangement to allow four Western scholars to do four books. The KGB records had never been opened before. The authors had no ability to tell the Soviet folks what to do with this. If we wanted to look at the material, we had to come to a negotiated agreement with them. We had to work with the Soviet--with Russian authors. And basically, I think it is fair to say that we learned a fair amount. All of this is stated in the introduction of my book. I did not write a check to the KGB for materials there, and all of this material that we found will be in the Hoover Institution, and people can make what they want of it. There were four excellent books produced. One of my colleagues wrote a superb book about the Cuban missile crisis, Professor Timothy Naftali, who is in the room here, and can explain the lengths to which all of the American authors went to try to encourage the Russians to increase their access to the West. We failed. They shut down after about a year. And just at that time the VENONA Papers in Washington opened up, so we were able to confirm a lot of the materials that we had in our book. But those were two different stories. Chairman Collins. Thank you. Senator Lieberman. Senator Lieberman. Thanks, Madam Chairman. Thanks for your answers to Senator Collins, Dr. Weinstein. One of the matters that I wanted to take up Senator Collins has asked and you have answered--and others may take it up again-- which is one of the points of concern expressed to us by some has been what your policy would be on openness. I want to get back to that in a minute. But the second concern I think has little or nothing to do with you, but more to do with the White House. And that concern is deepened by the letter that Senator Levin read earlier, in which the current Archivist, Governor Carlin, clearly says that he was asked to resign. I wanted to ask you, just to clarify, whether you had any knowledge of why there was a vacancy or how the vacancy came to be when the White House began to talk to you about whether you were interested in being nominated for Archivist. Mr. Weinstein. No. Senator Lieberman. None at all? Mr. Weinstein. No, sir. They asked me if I would be interested in the position. Frankly, at the time, I had very little contact with Governor Carlin. We have had a few social contacts. We had lunch once or twice over the years. I didn't know him very well. I assumed at the time that he was--that for some reason or other he was leaving his post. I didn't ask, they didn't tell. And I didn't have a job offer. They didn't say, ``We want you to become Archivist.'' They said, ``We are considering the possibility that you might become Archivist. Would you be interested if the job were open?'' And, frankly, if the job were open, I would have been interested. Senator Lieberman. Yes. I presume--or let me ask you, have you seen and talked to Governor Carlin since you were nominated? Mr. Weinstein. Once. I called Governor Carlin, I guess the day after my nomination was announced, and suggested that we get together. He agreed; then he cancelled the meeting. And after that, the only person at the Archives that I had been in touch with was Mr. Runkel, Deputy General Counsel, who helped me fill out the financial forms that I had to fill out at the time, and I did do that. But I took the position that I should not be in touch with anyone at the Archives. It was improper or inappropriate for me to be in touch with them while Governor Carlin, as Archivist, was still there. I didn't want any confusion about it. Senator Lieberman. Right. Mr. Weinstein. One instance in which somebody from the Archives called about a particular policy matter, a relatively minor one, and I said, ``Please don't talk to me. This is not my business. You should talk to Governor Carlin.'' Senator Lieberman. But other than that phone call, you have not talked to Governor Carlin? Mr. Weinstein. No, sir. Senator Lieberman. And in that phone call, did he raise any--did he say anything about why the position was becoming vacant? Mr. Weinstein. No. Senator Lieberman. And I presume, therefore, didn't say to you that he had been asked to resign? Mr. Weinstein. Senator, he didn't say anything like that, no. We talked about the meeting. Senator Lieberman. Who was the person at the White House who asked you whether you might be interested in being Archivist if there was---- Mr. Weinstein. As I said in my questionnaire, the Director of Presidential Personnel, Dina Powell. Senator Lieberman. Right. And in those conversations--you see, I want to get this all out in the interest of disclosure. I think there are some people who are maybe not doing it in print but raising questions about whether this change is occurring, that Governor Carlin was asked to resign, you are coming in, in some sense to carry out a more secretive policy at the Archives, perhaps even to protect records of this administration or the previous Bush Administration. So I want to ask you whether there was ever a conversation between you and Dina Powell or anyone else at the White House along the lines of what your decisions would be about opening up records of the first Bush Administration or this one. Mr. Weinstein. Absolutely not. And, Senator, may I say a word about this? You and others on the Committee have worked with me on different matters and I think understand that I would not be here today under those circumstances, neither the job, the very prestigious job of Archivist of the United States or any other government position is worth my integrity or anything like that. No, I would not--the Archivist's job is as the advocate for access. Senator Lieberman. Right. Mr. Weinstein. And if one can't be a serious advocate for access, then one shouldn't want to be Archivist of the United States. Senator Lieberman. Who else have you at any time spoken to at the White House about this appointment? Mr. Weinstein. Judge Gonzales once. Senator Lieberman. Judge Gonzales? And that was at an in- person meeting or a phone call? Mr. Weinstein. That was an in-person meeting that was in late November, at some point. I don't have the date in front of me. And his deputy, whose name at the moment, forgive me, escapes--Mr. Deutsch, I think? Senator Lieberman. No problem. Did Judge Gonzales question you about what your policy would be on the openness of public records? Mr. Weinstein. We talked generally about public records, but did he ask me how I would behave in connection with opening records? No. Senator Lieberman. No? And just to---- Mr. Weinstein. But generally about the Archivist's role in dealing with these records, right. Senator Lieberman. Yes. And just to get it out in the open, no specific questions about how you would deal with access to the records of this administration? Mr. Weinstein. Oh, no. Senator Lieberman. Or the former Bush Administration? Mr. Weinstein. No, absolutely not. Senator Lieberman. OK. Mr. Weinstein. I have only met the President, just to complete that catalogue, if I may, I met him once in 1988 when the President was a participant in a Center for Democracy program. Senator Lieberman. Right. Mr. Weinstein. That is the only time that I met the President of the United States. Senator Lieberman. Thank you. My time is up. Chairman Collins. Senator Durbin. Senator Durbin. Mr. Weinstein, since seeing Mr. Carlin's letter, I have to ask you a question. He says in his letter, ``We are on the verge of awarding a contract for the design of the Electronic Records Archive, a ground-breaking system that will allow the Government to manage and preserve any kind of electronic records. The design is just the first step. We are working very hard to secure support and funding for systems development. I would like to see the budget request through to fruition over the next 4 months.'' Are you familiar with this contract? Mr. Weinstein. I'm familiar with the briefing materials on it that were given to me, Senator, yes. I haven't read the contract. Senator Durbin. Do you know the companies involved in the competition for the contract? Mr. Weinstein. No, I don't. Senator Durbin. OK. Let me go to another issue, if I might, and I am trying to reconcile one of your responses to the questions with some information that I have here. You have said repeatedly in your responses to our questions that you are committed to maximizing access to all manner of government records, including Presidential records, in a timely manner and to the greatest extent appropriate. And when it comes to Presidential documents, I gather from reading the law, Chapter 22, Section 2203, that the Archivist has the responsibility to deposit Presidential records and to decide under the law when to release them. Is that correct, one of your legal responsibilities would be that? Mr. Weinstein. I would assume in general, but I'd prefer on any legal matter to be able to amend any answer by consultation with the general counsel over there before I would do that. Senator Durbin. That is fair. Mr. Weinstein. I am not a lawyer. Senator Durbin. But I am going to go---- Mr. Weinstein. I'm married to one, but I'm not a lawyer. Senator Durbin. Maybe you want to talk to her. [Laughter.] Because I want to ask you about something you say here because it doesn't square with that. And here is what it is: We passed in 1989, 25 years ago, the Presidential Records Act declaring Presidential papers were the property of the people of the United States to be administered by the Archives, made available 12 years after a President left office. President Reagan issued an Executive Order which established how long a President had to claim Executive privilege on these records. Then comes President Bush, in an administration where the availability and confidentiality of records has been a big issue, to the point where the Vice President took a case to the Supreme Court to avoid disclosing documents in the preparation of his energy bill. Mr. Weinstein. Right. Senator Durbin. Now, President Bush, with Executive Order 13233, nullified President Reagan's order, imposing new restrictions on the access to Presidential papers, requiring the presumption of non-disclosure, which runs counter to your stated purpose of being committed to maximum access. Mr. Weinstein. Right. Senator Durbin. Now, that is the state of play. You have a law where you as Archivist are responsible for Presidential records. You have a personal commitment to access. You have a President who has issued an Executive Order reducing access. Now, let me read you what you told the Committee about this. There is a declaratory judgment action involved now about this Executive Order. ``If confirmed by the Senate as Archivist, it would be my responsibility--'' you say, ``so long as Executive Order 13233 is in place--to oversee NARA's legal team defending the Executive Order against court challenge.'' That seems exactly the opposite. It would seem that you would be defending the underlying law against the new Executive Order which restricts access to Presidential records. Why would you be defending President Bush's Executive Order instead of the law that creates your office? Mr. Weinstein. Senator, may I read the remainder of that paragraph? Senator Durbin. Of course. Mr. Weinstein. Because I think it explains this, and also, as you know, the current Archivist has the responsibility and is, in fact, defending--or the general counsel is defending this in court. What I said was as follows, after that, I said, ``. . . I would respectfully defer a fuller response until I can consult with NARA's general counsel and his staff.'' What I can state as a private citizen at this point, however, in response to the question of Executive Order 13233's impact on balancing the interest of preserving confidentiality with the interest of public disclosure is that obviously the Executive Order tilts the balance in confidentiality's direction rather than timely disclosure. That much is clear. Then down further, I make my essential point: ``The pursuit of consensus on the issues''--the lawsuit did not work, did not get the Executive Order rescinded. ``The pursuit of consensus on the issues raised by Executive Order 13233 surely ought to be allowed a moment or two of dialogue and negotiation before proceeding on the current legal and adversarial track.'' I can't say that anything will happen to that, but I can say that if I was confirmed as Archivist, what I would like to do would be to sit down with all the interested principals and see if anything can be done about the problems here. Senator Durbin. Mr. Weinstein, I hope if you are confirmed that you can do exactly that and the lawsuit goes away. You have stated here that you believe that as Archivist you would be responsible for overseeing the Archives legal team defending the Executive Order against a court challenge. Everything else you say is fine: You need to consult with attorneys, you hope to work this all out. But why would you start arguing from the point that you are not defending the law that creates your office rather than the Executive Order which diminishes the power of your office? Did you discuss this Executive Order with Mr. Gonzales? Mr. Weinstein. No, not at all. Senator Durbin. Did this ever come up? Mr. Weinstein. It never came up. Senator Durbin. Well, I am glad it didn't, but I really hope that you will revisit that statement. I think that statement is conflicting with your basic statutory responsibility. I think you need to defend the law first, whomever the President might be. Mr. Weinstein. I couldn't agree more, Senator, but one thing that I think you recognize is that the business of restricting access conflicts with my impulses to encourage access at all times. And in that statement, there is a conundrum there. I don't have an easy answer for that. But I will go back and look at it again. Senator Durbin. I think I know where your heart is, but I want to know where your lawyers' will be. Mr. Weinstein. All right. Senator Durbin. That is what this is all about. And if your lawyers are going to be defending the restriction of access to Presidential records, then I think you are on the wrong side. Mr. Weinstein. You make a very good point. Senator Durbin. Thank you. Chairman Collins. Senator Levin. Senator Levin. Thank you, Madam Chairman. Was this drafted, this answer to the question, by you or by the deputy at the White House? Mr. Weinstein. The answer to what question? Senator Levin. Question 42, the one you were just reading. Mr. Weinstein. I drafted every question that was given to me, the 46 questions that were sent by the Committee. There was no input by anybody, as far as I know, unless--they may have read it by now, depending on how one gets copies of these things around town. But, no, there was no input by--and not just in the White House. I can categorically say there was no input by anybody in the Congress, in the White House, in the interested groups and the stakeholders, in the Archives. This is Allen Weinstein's answer to that question. And, as Senator Durbin indicated, Senator Levin, I was trying to balance off a number of different ideas in my own mind based upon what is certainly not at this stage in the game the most informed knowledge of where the Archives has been on this issue over the last several years. Senator Levin. You, in two places in your answer on Question 42, indicate that the impact of that Executive Order ``on balancing the interest of preserving confidentiality with the interest of public disclosure is that, obviously, the Executive Order tilts the balance in confidentiality's direction rather than in timely disclosure.'' And then at the end of that answer, you say, ``As previously stated in response to this question, it tips the balance--at least temporarily--in favor of greater confidentiality and less public disclosure.'' So I assume from that you would believe that the Executive Order at least contradicts the spirit of the 1978 Act? Mr. Weinstein. It doesn't help. Senator Levin. Now, in answer to Senator Durbin's question--it's a good question--will you expand your answer to that question for the record? Mr. Weinstein. Absolutely. Senator Levin. Are you familiar with the scheduled release of certain records from the first Bush Administration in January 2005? Mr. Weinstein. Not to any great degree, Senator. Not to any great degree, no. Senator Levin. Well, to the degree that you are---- Mr. Weinstein. Well, that this was scheduled, yes, but I haven't seen any literature on that. Senator Levin. Are you prepared and willing to release on schedule whatever records of that administration are scheduled to be released, if you are confirmed? Mr. Weinstein. If I'm confirmed, I'm prepared to honor the law, whatever the law states and wherever that may take me. If those materials are scheduled for release at that stage in the game, then I don't see why they shouldn't be released. But, Senator, I have not received extensive briefing materials on that whole area. Senator Levin. OK. Madam Chairman, I would just ask that the letters that I made reference to before, the letter that I wrote to Governor Carlin and his response to my letter, be made part of the record.\1\ --------------------------------------------------------------------------- \1\ The letters referred to appear in the Appendix on page 130 and 131. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Chairman Collins. Without objection. Senator Levin. And I also would ask you and the Ranking Member, if you would at some point in the near future, to consider requesting the White House to comment on Governor Carlin's statement that he was asked to resign. I think it is important that we ask the White House why it is that they asked the current Archivist to resign. So I am not going to request that that decision be made at this point right now, but I would ask that you and the Ranking Member convene your great minds on that question and hopefully ask the White House for their comment on that statement. Chairman Collins. I would note that the Archivist does not have a statutory term. I mentioned to the Ranking Member that I was surprised to learn that. So I think that is an important point to be put into the record because this is not a case where there is a set term. Senator Durbin. Madam Chairman, may I ask a question? Isn't it also a fact, though, that if an Archivist is to be removed, there has to be a reason stated? Senator Levin. That was the part that I read earlier. Chairman Collins. But there was consideration to having a 10-year term for the Archivist that was not included. It may be something that this Committee should revisit. Senator Levin. I think that is accurate. There is no specified term. But it is also, as Senator Durbin, and as I said in my opening statement, that if the Archivist is to be removed, there must be a stated reason given to the Congress, I believe, for that. Both of those facts, assuming I stated them correctly, are interesting and to some extent relevant. But the issue that I am interested in here, because I think it really goes to the question of the independence of this office, is, if, in fact, Governor Carlin was asked to resign, as he says he was, in effect--they said they wanted to appoint a new Archivist. So that amounts to a request to resign. I would be interested in giving the White House the opportunity to tell us why it was they requested that he resign. I think that is an important question to be answered, and I would ask that the Committee ask the question. Obviously, if the Committee through its Chairman and Ranking Member decide for whatever reason not to, that is a right I will defend. But I would then ask the question on my own as an individual Member of the Committee. I think it would be preferable, frankly, that it come from the Committee, if it is appropriate. But I do not want to prejudge the appropriateness or your thought processes on it, because I have tremendous respect for you both. And whatever decision you make I will defend. But if the Chairman and the Ranking Member decide for whatever reason not to request that information from the White House, then I as an individual Member would make that request. Thank you. Chairman Collins. You are welcome. Senator Levin. Could these be made part of the record? Chairman Collins. The letters will be made part of the record. I will also enter into the record Governor Carlin's letter of resignation,\1\ which has a very different tone to it, and I think that is important to be part of the record as well. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- \1\ The letter referred to appears in the Appendix on page 132. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Senator Levin. That was part of my request. Chairman Collins. His letter, as opposed to your letter to and from? Senator Levin. If I failed to say that, I made a mistake. I should have included his letter of resignation. I thank the Chairman for that. Chairman Collins. Without objection. Professor, I just want to ask you one closing question, and that is, in view of the discussion we have just had and the questions that Senator Levin and others have raised not about your nomination but, rather, the circumstances surrounding your nomination, do you believe this Committee should consider legislation that would give the Archivist a set term, say, of 10 years? Do you have an opinion on that? Mr. Weinstein. I would support such legislation, Chairman, because it may do away with some of the dilemmas of archival terms. The Archivist's terms up to now have averaged 8 or 9 years a term for the previous Archivists. However, I wouldn't say that it was essential. I think it is essential in the future to engage in a consultative process beyond perhaps the one that now exists. But as far as legislation is concerned, I would support it if the Committee and the Congress were in favor of it. Chairman Collins. Thank you. Do either of my colleagues have a final question for our witness today? Senator Lieberman. I do not. I thank you, Dr. Weinstein. There is this funny conundrum which I do think that Senator Levin has amplified, which is that Governor Carlin has not been removed from office, literally, because he submitted his resignation. But now we find that he was asked to submit his resignation, so that is what we are going to counsel together on, whether we should ask the White House to explain to us why they asked for that resignation. So the Chairman and I will sit and reason together. Senator Levin. Madam Chairman, just one other thing. As I look at the letter, the resignation letter, so-called, actually is--there is a statement that, ``I will submit my resignation upon the confirmation and swearing-in of the ninth Archivist of the United States.'' So, technically, I guess, he has not resigned yet. He has been asked to submit his resignation, which he has done conditionally. Chairman Collins. An intention to resign, I guess would be a more appropriate description. Senator Levin. Right. Senator Lieberman. Anyway, Dr. Weinstein, I would say your testimony has been very responsive, and you do, again--you are caught in a swirl that certainly is not of your making, but it is around the nomination. But, you know, you do have an extraordinary and very broadly respected record as a historian, and that actually seems to make you qualified for this job. Mr. Weinstein. Thank you, Senator. Chairman Collins. You get applause. I mean, the rest of us don't get electronic applause. [Laughter.] Senator Lieberman. My staff does this for me, just to make me feel good. [Laughter.] Chairman Collins. To compensation you for no longer being on the campaign trail. I want to thank the professor for appearing before the Committee today and for his cooperation throughout the process. I personally am impressed that you on your own answered all 46 of those questions. I think there are very few nominees who would have answered, ``Yes, I wrote those personally,'' to the Committee's questions. There have been several letters and statements submitted to the Committee from a variety of organizations, scholars, historians, archivists, and others. All of those, without objection, will be included in the hearing record.\1\ --------------------------------------------------------------------------- \1\ The letters referred to appear in the Appendix on pages 134 through 170. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- And also, without objection, the record will be kept open until 5 p.m. tomorrow for the submission of any additional materials, written questions, or statements for the record. Again, thank you very much for being here today. You certainly have a distinguished background, and your commitment to openness and public access is very important to this Committee, and we look forward to working with you in your new position, if all goes well. Thank you. Mr. Weinstein. Thank you, Chairman. Chairman Collins. This hearing is now adjourned. [Whereupon, at 4:41 p.m., the Committee was adjourned.] A P P E N D I X ---------- PREPARED STATEMENT OF SENATOR FRANK R. LAUTENBERG Madam Chairman: I want to welcome Professor Weinstein to today's hearing. Professor Weinstein has done ground-breaking research to illuminate Cold War history on such important matters as the Alger Hiss-Whittaker Chambers case and the extent of Soviet espionage in America from the 1930's to the early 1950's. I intend to support Professor Weinstein's nomination to be Archivist of the United States. But I do want to raise several concerns about the way in which this nomination has been brought before the Governmental Affairs Committee. First, the current Archivist, John Carlin, had expressed his desire to remain in the post until 2005. Then, last December, he abruptly changed course and announced his intention to step down as soon as a successor has been ``nominated and confirmed.'' I want to know if Governor Carlin is being forced out of his job by the Bush Administration and, if so why. Second, I want to know why this Committee has not conducted any oversight hearings with regard to the National Archives and Records Administration in over a decade. Third, I want to know why the Bush Administration made no attempt to ``vet'' Professor Weinstein's nomination with ``recognized organizations of archivists and historians''--something required under the National Archives and Records Administration Act of 1984. And I want to know why the Committee refused to invite the heads of any of these organizations to testify in person today. Fourth, I hope to get Professor Weinstein's personal commitment--if he is confirmed as our Nation's Archivist--to pursuing what our former colleague Pat Moynihan called ``a culture of openness.'' I agree with Senator Moynihan's assessment that classifying some six million documents each year is the most pernicious form of government regulation since we ``don't know what we don't know.'' I'm anxious to hear Professor Weinstein's ideas on how, as Archivist, he will work to make our government operate in a more transparent manner since we are, after all, a democracy. Thank you, Madam Chairman. 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