The ACLU also expressed concerns about the State Department's demands that Van Buren "pre-clear" all of his articles, blogs, tweets, Facebook posts, and all other social media.
Further, the State Department's pre-publication review policy, as applied to blog posts and articles, raises serious constitutional questions. Through its policy, the State Department is prospectively restricting the speech of Mr. Van Buren as well as all present and future State Department employees. . . . There is no justification for such an expansive prior restraint on State Department employees' speech.
The State Department's suppression of dissent is particularly out of line considering how vehemently Secretary Clinton preaches "internet freedom" abroad. Van Buren eloquently pointed this out on
NPR in February:
Internet is a force for good and freedom, and at the same time, the same Secretary of State's organization is seeking to oust me, to destroy me, to push me out of it, I realize that that level of hypocrisy needs to be answered . . . Secretary of State, Madam, why is your institution not allowing me the same rights that you're bleating about for bloggers around the world? Why not here at home?
In a
blog post describing the letter, the ACLU's Kate Wood explained both the constitutional rights of government employees, and the value their contributions offer to the public debate:
Government employees have the First Amendment right to speak as private citizens on matters of public concern. There's no question that the subject of Mr. Van Buren's book, blog posts, and news articles — the reconstruction effort in Iraq — is such a matter. And, government employees are often in the best position to know what ails the agencies that they work for.
The retaliation against Van Buren not only threatens to deprive him of a storied decades-long career as a foreign service officer, but it threatens to send a chilling message to all other State Department employees who might witness waste, fraud, abuse, mismanagement, illegality or dangers to health and public safety that
exposing such wrongdoing is just as dangerous to a career - if not more so - than
committing it.
My organization, the Government Accountability Project, has filed a whistleblower retaliation complaint on Van Buren's behalf with the Office of Special Counsel.
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