White House senior adviser and President Donald Trumpās son-in-law Jared Kushner has reportedly relied on encrypted messaging service WhatsApp to conduct official White House business.
The information came to light in a December 19th meeting between Reps. Elijah Cummings (D-MD) and Trey Gowdy (R-SC), and Kushnerās lawyer, Abbe Lowell, which was made public for the first time on Thursday, Politico reports.
Cummings, the House Oversight Committee chairman, wrote in a letter to White House counsel Pat Cipollone on Thursday thatĀ the committee received information from Lowell that Kushner ācontinues to useā the messaging service for government work, and demanded documents related to White House officialsā use of private email for government work, The Hill reports.
?News Alert: Chairman @RepCummings sends letter requesting documents regarding new information about #WhiteHouse officials using private email and messaging apps in violation of the Presidential Records Act and White House policy. Full Release:https://t.co/flFSqldsKp
ā Oversight Committee (@OversightDems) March 21, 2019
According to Cummings, Lowell told the committee Kushner sent screenshots of messages from WhatsApp to his official White House email or the National Security Council, and said Kushner was in compliance with the law, ABC News reports. Under the Presidential Records Act, White House officials are prohibited from using non-official email accounts or messaging applications without forwarding those messages to their official accounts within 20 days.
Lowell did not say whether Kushner used the messaging service to discuss classified information.
āThatās above my pay grade,ā Lowell told the lawmakers, per Cummingsā letter.
Kushner, who oversees the White Houseās policies in the Middle East, has reportedly communicated with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman via WhatsApp.
Lowell disputed some of Cummingsā remarks in his letter to the White House about their conversation, suggesting that he told Cummings and Gowdy that he was not the authority on Kushnerās use of WhatsApp and that those questions should be directed to the White House counselās office.
āI specifically said that āIf there was a question about Jaredās use of WhatsApp, that is a question for White House counsel, not me,āā Lowell wrote in his response letter.
āI did convey that Mr. Kushner follows the protocols (including the handling of classified information) as he has been instructed to do,ā he added.
White House spokesman Steven Groves acknowledged receiving Cummingsā letter, saying, āThe White House has received Chairman Cummingsā letter of March 21st. As with all properly authorized oversight requests, the White House will review the letter and will provide a reasonable response in due course.ā
The committee chairman is investigating possible violations of federal record-keeping laws by Kushner, senior White House adviser Ivanka Trump and other current and former White House officials, ABC News reports. Cummings has asked for lists of White House officials that have used personal email accounts and messaging services to conduct official business, as well as the archiving process for electronic communications at the White House.
Cummings, who has blasted the White House for failing to provide documents that have been repeatedly requested, has given the White House until April 4th to cooperate with the Oversight Committeeās investigation voluntarily, The Hill reports.
MUST READ: Chairman @RepCummings pens op-ed on the #WhiteHouseās unprecedented level of stonewalling, delay and obstruction. Check it out here: https://t.co/ZIrOJZsUoG
ā Oversight Committee (@OversightDems) March 20, 2019
āThe White Houseās failure to provide documents and information is obstructing the Committeeās investigation into allegations of violations of federal records laws by White House officials,ā Cummings wrote. āIn fact, as you know, the White House has not produced a single piece of paper to the Committee in the 116th Congress ā in this or any other investigation.ā