
In her opinion, Huvelle wrote there is "no evidence that the [directive] was intended to be, or has been treated as, a confidential presidential communication."
The Obama administration has maintained that the document was only intended for those who "need to know," but the judge argued the order was "distributed far beyond the president's close advisers and its substance was widely discussed by the president in the media."
Huvelle also lectured the federal government on its "cavalier attitude" when it comes to public oversight and transparency.
"The government appears to adopt the cavalier attitude that the President should be permitted to convey orders throughout the Executive Branch without public oversight...to engage in what is in effect governance by 'secret law,'" she wrote.
The Obama administration will now be required by law to make the document available. It's unclear why the administration has fought to keep the document hidden from the public.
The White House website refers to the Presidential Policy Directive on Global Development as the "first of its kind by a U.S. administration." WhiteHouse.gov also provides a "fact sheet" about the directive here.
Read Huvelle's entire opinion here.
Jason Howerton is the evening front page editor at TheBlaze. Before joining TheBlaze in mid-2012, he worked as a journalist in West Virginia covering the city political scene in Morgantown and Clarksburg. His work has been featured in Drudge Report, Business Insider, the Associated Press and a number of other outlets. Howerton has a B.A. in mass communication/journalism from Texas State University. He lives in Dallas with his fiancé and dog. You can find him on Twitter @jason_howerton.



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