GOP thinks “Muslim” is a race

New York Sun - October 11, 2006

GOP Donors’ Personal Data Disclosed in RNC Privacy Slip BY RUSSELL BERMAN - Staff Reporter of the Sun

In a breach of privacy, the Republican National Committee erroneously
e-mailed a list that contained the names, races, and Social Security
numbers of dozens of top Republican donors — and that identified two
of the contributors as Muslim — to this reporter.

In the course of preparing for a Washington fund-raiser on Friday
headlined by President Bush, an RNC staffer, Dee Dee Lancaster,
intended to e-mail a security list of confirmed guests to other event
planners and the Secret Service. But Ms. Lancaster mistyped one of
the addresses, and the e-mail wound up in the Gmail account of this
reporter.

The RNC confirmed the slip-up, which raised questions about how the
committee handles sensitive personal information and what records it
keeps of its supporters.The e-mail was sent to four other addresses,
including one with the Secret Service.

The attached spreadsheet of 76 guests included category headings with
Social Security numbers, dates of birth, and “race.” The race of all
but three were listed as “Caucasian.” One was identified as “Asian,”
and the race of two others, Malik and Seeme Hasan, was listed as
“Muslim.”

The classification drew criticism from Mrs. Hasan, who founded a
group called Muslims for Bush and who, along with her husband, has
donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to Republican committees and
candidates in recent years.

“The only word I can think of is not very nice,” Mrs. Hasan said
yesterday in a telephone interview from her home in Colorado.

“I think that whoever wrote this obviously has no knowledge, because
Muslim is not a race. It is a religion,” she said.

Mrs. Hasan described herself as “a very big Republican supporter” and
said she had discussed issued faced by American Muslims several times
with President Bush and other GOP leaders. She said later yesterday
that she had called the Republican National Committee to protest the
labeling of her and her husband, a neurologist and HMO executive.

Mrs. Hasan said she and Dr. Hasan planned to attend the fund-raiser,
a luncheon at Evermay, a mansion in the Georgetown neighborhood of
Washington, D.C. The event is being held for members of Team 100 and
Republican Regents, two high-level donor groups in the party.

Officials said yesterday that errors by both the RNC and the Secret
Service had contributed to the inclusion of racial and religious data
on the security list. Until a year ago, the Secret Service did
require race as part of its standard background check for guests at
events involving the president. Following complaints, including one
from the White House press corps, the practice ended. But the Secret
Service requested racial information for Friday’s luncheon, a
spokesman for the agency, Eric Zahren, said.

“It was wrong. It should not have been done,” Mr. Zahren told The New
York Sun.

Mr. Bush himself said of racial profiling in July of 2001, “It’s
wrong in America, and we’ve got to get rid of it.”

As for the listing of Muslim as a race, the RNC took the blame. “This
was an error on the part of a staffer here at the RNC, and it was
unfortunate,” a committee spokeswoman, Tracey Schmitt, said. She
called the error “regrettable,” but she did not say whether the RNC
keeps religious data on its supporters.

Mr. Zahren said the Secret Service “did not request that, and we
would not request that.”

The e-mailing of sensitive personal information comes weeks after the
executive director of the Democratic National Committee, Tom McMahon,
sent a letter to the RNC’s chief of staff, Kelley McCullough,
alerting her to security flaws in the GOP.com Web site.

“People should not feel that their crucial data is threatened because
they participate in the political process,” a spokesman for the DNC,
Damien LaVera, said yesterday.

The use of e-mail for background information is “not the preferred
method” for the Secret Service, Mr. Zahren said, although there is no
prohibition against it. The agency requests that guests provide their
Social Security numbers, but they are free to decline.

“We go to great lengths to safeguard this sensitive information once
it is in our possession,” he said.

Leave a Reply