The Office of the Special Counsel (OSC) determined on Thursday that Navy Secretary Carlos Del Toro contravened the Hatch Act by endorsing Joe Biden’s reelection. The Hatch Act prohibits federal employees from engaging in political activities during duty hours or in their official capacity. It also bars them from soliciting political contributions and attempting to influence election outcomes.
A report was sent to Biden by the OSC, concluding that Del Toro violated the Hatch Act during an interview with the BBC and public remarks made during an official trip abroad on behalf of the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD).
Del Toro, who recently said he had “no regrets” about firing thousands of unvaccinated sailors, made statements such as, “I’m confident that the American people will step up to the plate come November and support President Biden for a second term as our Commander-in-Chief, so that we can continue to work together as free democratic countries respect each other around the globe.”
Del Toro also told a BBC reporter that Biden has shown “strong and mature leadership” over the past four years and that the United States would benefit from maintaining this leadership.
Special Counsel Hampton Dellinger confirmed, “When speaking in his official capacity on a taxpayer-funded trip, Secretary Del Toro encouraged electoral support for one candidate over another in the upcoming presidential election. By doing so, he crossed a legal line and violated the Hatch Act.”
Dellinger also stressed the inconsistency between Del Toro’s actions and his past statements about keeping military functions apolitical. In July, Del Toro emphasized that the Department of the Navy should remain impartial, acknowledging, “Public trust and confidence depend on this.”