EPA chief Pruitt faces congressional
grilling on spending, ethics
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[April 26, 2018]
By Valerie Volcovici and Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt will face tough questions from
lawmakers in congressional budget hearings on Thursday over a long list
of alleged ethical missteps plaguing his tenure.
The hearings will pose a critical test for Pruitt as the White House
becomes increasingly frustrated by news reports on issues ranging from
his heavy spending on first-class air travel and security, to his rental
of a room in a Washington townhouse linked to an energy industry
lobbyist.
Although President Donald Trump has expressed support for Pruitt for his
work scaling back environmental regulations seen as overly burdensome to
industry, White House sources have told Reuters that officials are
becoming worried about the flow of charges against him.

There are nearly a dozen pending investigations into Pruitt with the EPA
inspector general, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) and the
White House Office of Management and Budget, as well as the U.S. House
of Representatives oversight committee.
Recent findings by the GAO, which said the EPA violated the law by
installing a $43,000 "privacy booth" in Pruitt's office without
notifying lawmakers first, are of particular concern to the West Wing,
the White House sources said.
The EPA has defended Pruitt's spending on travel and security, saying it
has been crucial to protecting him from public threats and ensuring he
can conduct confidential work, and have also pointed out that Pruitt's
lease for the room in Washington was around market rate.
EPA spokesman Jahan Wilcox said that Pruitt intends to use the hearings
as an "opportunity to reiterate the accomplishments of President Trump’s
EPA, which includes: working to repeal (President Barack) Obama’s Clean
Power Plan and Waters of the United States, providing regulatory
certainty, and declaring a war on lead - all while returning to
Reagan-era staffing levels.”
White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the White House was
evaluating the allegations against Pruitt. "We expect the EPA
administrator to answer for them," she said.
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Scott Pruitt, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator,
gestures as he testifies to the Senate Environment and Public Works
Committee oversight hearing on the Environmental Protection Agency
on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, U.S., January 30, 2018.
REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/File Photo

Democratic lawmakers that oppose Pruitt's regulatory rollbacks have
seized on his scandals, with 170 of them calling for his
resignation. In recent days, five Republican Congress members have
joined their ranks in calling for his ouster.
"I don't care how sound your policies are, you just can't treat the
taxpayers in this country the way he apparently has," Republican
Senator John Kennedy told Reuters.
"I would be embarrassed to fly first-class like that. And I
understand he's in a job, that he's made enemies, but 20 body men is
a bit much," Kennedy said.
Some Republican lawmakers have said they would support oversight
hearings for Pruitt, including the Senate environment committee
chair, John Barrasso, and third-ranking Republican Senator John
Thune.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said at a news conference
this week that he is still a Pruitt supporter but signaled that the
EPA head's Hill performance could determine if that support
continued. "We'll just see," McConnell said.

(Reporting By Valerie Volcovici and Richard Cowan; additional
reporting by Steve Holland and Timothy Gardner; editing by Jonathan
Oatis)
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