Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Jaczko the Jerk: Harry Reid's Sexist Crony Gets the Boot

Jaczko the Jerk: Harry Reid's Sexist Crony Gets the Boot
By Michelle Malkin
5/23/2012

The embattled chair of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission resigned this week. It's a victory for Republican oversight on Capitol Hill, women and sound science. But it's also a lesson in the futility of Bush-era bipartisanship. When you cut deals with bullies, it's a timeless and bitter recipe for more bullying.

Gregory Jaczko served as appropriations director and science policy adviser to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., before joining the NRC in 2005. The anti-nuclear advocate was sworn in by his brass-knuckled boss and protector, Reid, who pressured the Bush administration to appoint him as a condition for moving through any other NRC nominations.

The GOP rolled. Reid and Jaczko rampaged. And President Obama -- doing the thing he does best -- made matters abysmally worse.

Reid connived to install Jaczko at the NRC to carry on their shared crusade against the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste facility in Nye County, Nev. Despite assurances that he would recuse himself, Jaczko proceeded to meddle aggressively in the issue. After the Obama administration named Jaczko chairman of the safety panel in 2009, all hell broke loose -- and then some.

Out of fear that researchers would confirm positive safety data, Jaczko ordered NRC staff to halt a technical evaluation of Yucca Mountain. Then he used the lack of data to order a complete work stoppage on the long-obstructed project. Last summer, the NRC inspector general determined that Jaczko "strategically withheld" information from the rest of the panel, manipulated agendas and "was not forthcoming about his intent" to shut down Yucca by any means necessary.

He kept the panel in the dark on other matters, too. After the Fukushima meltdown in Japan, Jaczko ordered his staff to hoard safety findings and keep them from other commissioners while he made unilateral policy decisions against their will.

In the course of his investigation, the NRC inspector general heard from numerous commission staffers about Jaczko's "unprofessional behavior" and outburst of anger that created an "intimidating workplace environment." The report said Jaczko told investigators he "regretted" his temper tantrums.

Last fall, the entire commission sent an extraordinary letter to the White House expressing "grave concerns" about Jaczko the Jerk's continued boorishness. "We believe that his actions and behavior are causing serious damage to this institution and are creating a chilled work environment at the NRC," wrote NRC commissioners Kristine L. Svinicki (Republican), George Apostolakis (Democrat), William D. Magwood IV (Democrat) and William C. Ostendorff (Republican). Commission staff detailed how Jaczko's "shaking angry" rage-fests caused at least one woman to cry and prompted Svinicki to have a staffer accompany her whenever she was in Jaczko's presence.

As if being a data doctor, control freak and chauvinist pig weren't enough, Jaczko added liar to his resume. Two weeks ago, Jaczko testified before Congress that he was unaware of any incidents in which he was accused of intimidating NRC staff. But internal GOP sources at NRC told Capitol Hill oversight staff that Jaczko personally had apologized to three female employees.

Where were all the Democratic femme-a-gogues who have spent the entire year braying about the GOP War on Women? Defending Reid's sexist crony, of course. Democratic California Sen. Barbara Boxer blamed the nuclear industry and complained of a "witch hunt."

Let there be no doubt: If Jaczko had been a Republican, Sen. Boxer, Rep. Nancy Pelosi, Sandra Fluke and Gloria Allred would be hosting anti-bullying conferences and workplace safety summit tours with his victims from now until November.

This is now the second high-profile resignation of an Obama green thug. Environmental Protection Agency administrator Al Armendariz, the combative enviro-crat who vowed to "crucify" businesses that challenged the administration's regulatory tyranny, stepped down last month. GOP watchdogs have done their jobs on Capitol Hill. But it's up to voters at the ballot box to get to the root of the problem -- and kick the head goon-in-chief to the curb.
___________________________________________

To read another article by Michelle Malkin, click here.

No comments: