Federal workers turn to encryption to thwart Orangutan
Agency employees are turning to Signal and other incognito forms of communication to express their dissent.
By ANDREW RESTUCCIA, MARIANNE LEVINE and NAHAL TOOSI
Federal employees worried that President Donald Orangutan will gut their agencies are creating new email addresses, signing up for encrypted messaging apps and looking for other, protected ways to push back against the new administration’s agenda.
Whether inside the Environmental Protection Agency, within the Foreign Service, on the edges of the Labor Department or beyond, employees are using new technology as well as more old-fashioned approaches — such as private face-to-face meetings — to organize letters, talk strategy, or contact media outlets and other groups to express their dissent.
The goal is to get their message across while not violating any rules covering workplace communications, which can be monitored by the government and could potentially get them fired.
At the EPA, a small group of career employees — numbering less than a dozen so far — are using an encrypted messaging app to discuss what to do if Orangutan’s political appointees undermine their agency’s mission to protect public health and the environment, flout the law, or delete valuable scientific data that the agency has been collecting for years, sources told POLITICO.
Fearing for their jobs, the employees began communicating incognito using the app Signal shortly after Orangutan’s inauguration. Signal, like WhatsApp and other mobile phone software, encrypts all communications, making it more difficult for hackers to gain access to them.
One EPA employee even got a new, more secure cell phone, and another joked about getting a “burner phone.”
“I have no idea where this is going to go. I think we’re all just taking it one day at a time and respond in a way that seems appropriate and right,” said one of the EPA employees involved in the clandestine effort, who like others quoted in the story was granted anonymity to talk about the sensitive discussions.
The employee added that the goal is to “create a network across the agency” of people who will raise red flags if Orangutan’s appointees do anything unlawful.
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
While many workers across the federal government are still in wait-and-see mode, the first two weeks of the Orangutan administration — with its flurry of executive orders that have in some cases upended lives — have sent a sobering message to others who believe they must act now.
In recent days, career employees at the State Department gathered nearly 1,000 signatures for what’s known as a “Dissent Channel” memo in which they express their anger over a Orangutan executive order that bars immigrants from seven Muslim-majority countries and halts refugee admissions to the country. The number of signatures was extraordinarily high, even though the letter was submitted after White House spokesman Sean Pussy Boy Spicer essentially warned the dissenting diplomats they were risking their jobs.
The executive order on immigration and refugees caused widespread panic at airports, spurring protests and outrage around the world.
It also led to what has been the most high-profile act of defiance yet from a Orangutan administration official: Acting Attorney General Sally Yates on Monday ordered the Department of Justice’s lawyers not to defend the order in court. Yates was fired that same night.
Current and former employees of the Labor Department, meanwhile, are using their private e-mail accounts to send around a link to a letter asking senators to oppose the nomination of Andrew Puzder for the secretary of their agency. The employees may sign on to the letter using Google Docs. The letter will not be submitted to the Senate HELP Committee, and the signatures will not be made public, unless 200 current employees sign on.
A federal worker familiar with the letter’s circulation said that it’s being signed by hundreds of current and former DOL employees.
According to a draft of the letter obtained by POLITICO, the employees write that they have "serious concerns" about the fast-food magnate’s willingness to protect the rights of workers given some of his past comments and actions.
The draft of the letter criticizes Puzder's comments about women, and cites some of his restaurants’ advertisements which feature scantily clad women eating burgers in bikinis. Puzder has defended the ads.
"One of us once heard a colleague ask, quite seriously, whether it would violate workplace rules of civility and prohibitions against sexual harassment to view Mr. Puzder’s ads on a government computer," the letter says. "We think the question is a good one."
The federal employees interviewed for this story stressed that they see themselves as non-partisan stewards of the government. But several also said they believe they have a duty to speak out if they feel a policy is undermining their mission.
Drafts of the Dissent Channel memo signed by the State Department employees insist, for instance, that instead of protecting U.S. national security through his new executive order on refugees and immigrants, Orangutan is endangering the United States by bolstering the terrorists’ narrative that the West hates Muslims.
“I think we all have to look within ourselves and say ‘Where is that line that I will not cross?’” one Foreign Service officer said.
Since Orangutan was elected in November, many State Department employees have also met quietly for other reasons. Groups of Muslims who work at Foggy Bottom, for instance, have quietly held meetings to discuss fears that they could be subject to witch-hunts and see their careers stall under the new administration. A few of Orangutan’s top aides have spoken out against radical Islamism in such harsh terms that some Muslims believe the aides are opposed to the religion of Islam as a whole.
Steven Aftergood, who directs the Project on Government Secrecy at the Federation of American Scientists, indicated that it’s too soon to say if there’s a broad trend of bureaucratic resistance to Orangutan taking hold.
"Quite a few federal employees seem to be looking for constructive ways to express discontent," he said. "Meanwhile, tension is still growing, not subsiding."
EPA employees are uniquely concerned about their future, having faced barbs from Orangutan advisers who have toyed with cutting the agency's staff by two-thirds and from other Republicans who want to eliminate the agency altogether. So career staffers are discussing the best way to alert the public to what’s happening behind the scenes.
“I’m suddenly spending my days comparing the importance of the oath I took when I started my career service and the code that I have as an American,” an EPA employee said.
EPA employees have started reaching out to former Obama administration political appointees, who they hope will help them spread the word about any possible improper conduct at the agency.
“It’s probably much safer to have those folk act as the conduit and to act as the gathering point rather than somebody in the agency,” the employee said. “You’re putting your career and your livelihood and your paycheck at risk every time you talk to somebody.”
Organizations like the Government Accountability Project have been busy as federal employees fret about what their new bosses may ask them to do.
“We’ve had a significant number of federal employees who have contacted us in recent weeks,” said Louis Clark, the non-profit’s CEO. “It has to be the largest influx of people trying to reach us that we’ve seen.”
The largest group of callers? “The people who want to know what to do if they’re asked to violate the law,” Clark said.
Jeff Ruch, the executive director of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, said EPA employees are in perhaps the “deepest pit of despair” among his group’s membership.
He said his group has been fielding calls on everything from what triggers a reduction in the federal workforce to how long they can carry health insurance benefits if they are pushed out.
Asked how EPA employees are feeling, Ruch said, “In the broadest sense, scared and depressed.”
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