The Guardian Australia

Trump White House records can be given to Capitol attack panel, judge rules

- Hugo Lowell in Washington

A federal judge in Washington has ruled that hundreds of pages of White House records from the Trump administra­tion can be turned over to the House committee investigat­ing the deadly 6 January attack on the Capitol, defying objections from Donald Trump.

The decision, handed down late on Tuesday by the US district judge Tanya Chutkan, clears the way for the National Archives to start transmitti­ng the records requested by Congress as early as Friday, though attorneys for Trump immediatel­y vowed to appeal the ruling.

“The court holds that the public interest lies in permitting – not enjoining – the combined will of the legislativ­e and executive branches to study the events that led to January 6,” Chutkan wrote in a 39-page opinion that delivered a major win to the select committee.

The White House records in question are among the most sensitive: visitor logs, telephone records, and other documents from the files of Trump’s former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows as well as the former deputy White House counsel Patrick Philbin.

In total, the National Archives has indicated Trump was invoking executive privilege protection­s to block the release of at least 750 pages of records that pertained to the select committee’s request in August for records about Trump’s efforts to subvert the 2020 election.

The Biden administra­tion has already waived executive privilege for all of the documents in the first tranche of records requested by the select committee, but Trump sued the panel and the National Archives last month in an attempt to halt their release.

House investigat­ors have been pursuing the records for weeks as they undertake a far-reaching inquiry into the extent of the former president’s involvemen­t in the Capitol attack and whether he had advance knowledge of the insurrecti­on that left five dead and 140 injured.

The ruling from the US district court in Washington DC came after the select committee issued 10 new subpoenas to Trump administra­tion officials, including Trump’s former senior adviser Stephen Miller and press secretary Kayleigh McEnany.

The subpoenas, which demand documents and testimony, are focused squarely on activities involving the White House and come a day after the select committee subpoenaed other top Trump associates who aimed to undercut the results of the 2020 election.

The select committee gave the 10 Trump officials until 23 November to comply with the document requests in the subpoena, with deposition dates scheduled through December. It was not immediatel­y clear on Tuesday whether any of the officials would cooperate.

 ?? Photograph: NurPhoto/Getty Images ?? Trump supporters near the Capitol on 6 January. A judge’s decision clears the way for the National Archives to transmit records requested by Congress.
Photograph: NurPhoto/Getty Images Trump supporters near the Capitol on 6 January. A judge’s decision clears the way for the National Archives to transmit records requested by Congress.

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