If Hillary Clinton has to release her private emails, her allies want Republicans to turn over theirs too.
David Brock, who founded several key Democratic groups defending the former secretary of state and all-but-declared presidential candidate, is calling on Rep. Trey Gowdy, the chairman of the House Select Committee on Benghazi, to release his private emails.
In a letter to Gowdy to be sent Wednesday, shared with msnbc, Brock calls the demand that Clinton turn over a personal email server “Orwellian” and says it has “no basis in law or precedent.” But, he says, if Clinton has to turn over her private emails, Gowdy and his staff should have a taste of their own medicine.
“[S]ince you insist that Clinton’s private email be accessed, I’m writing today to ask you and your staff to abide by the same standard you seek to hold the Secretary to by releasing your own work-related and private email and that of your staff to the public,” Brock wrote.
Related: What Hillary didn’t say
It’s the latest partisan move in the nine-day-old controversy surrounding Clinton’s exclusive use of a private email account during her tenure as secretary of state. Just weeks away from a potential presidential campaign announcement, Clinton addressed the controversy for the first time publicly in New York City Tuesday, saying she did nothing wrong.
However, she said she deleted personal emails on the private server she set up at her home — about half of the total 60,000 emails sent and received. Gowdy and other Republicans want Clinton to turn over that server so they can make sure no official business was mixed into the 30,000 emails she deleted. Clinton said Tuesday the server will remain private.
It’s highly unlikely that Gowdy will comply with Brock’s request, but Democrats are hoping to muddy the waters and portray Clinton as being unfairly, and held to a different standard than other government officials who use private email accounts.









