Republicans grill FBI agent who said he would ‘stop’ Trump
An FBI agent who worked on investigations into Democrat Hillary Clinton and President Donald Trump’s campaign testified behind closed doors to a House committee on Wednesday as GOP lawmakers stepped up efforts to highlight what they say is bias at the Justice Department.
Peter Strzok exchanged antiTrump texts with a colleague, FBI attorney Lisa Page, as both worked on the Clinton investigation and briefly on special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into ties between Trump’s campaign and Russia. House Republicans have seized on the texts as part of multiple investigations into the Justice Department, the FBI and decisions that both made during the 2016 presidential election.
In one of the texts, from August 2016, Strzok wrote, “We’ll stop it,” in reference to a potential Trump election win.
The barrage of GOP criticism against the Justice Department comes just a few months before the midterm elections, and amid intense sparring between the parties over Mueller’s investigation. Democrats have accused Republicans of trying to undermine Mueller’s investigation for political gain.
President Donald Trump criticized the closed-door interview earlier with Strzok this week, saying that it should be “shown to the public on live television, not a closed door hearing that nobody will see.”
House Judiciary Chairman Robert Goodlatte, R-Va., has said there will also be a public hearing with Strzok.
A seasoned counterintelligence agent, Strzok had a leading role on the investigation into whether Clinton illegally mishandled classified information through her use of a private email server while secretary of state.
He later joined Mueller’s team investigating Russian election interference, but was reassigned last summer after the discovery of anti-Trump text messages he had traded with the FBI lawyer. Page had already left Mueller’s team.
The Republicans’ charges of bias were bolstered earlier this month by a report by the Justice Department’s internal watchdog that faulted top department officials, including former FBI Director James Comey, for their handling of the probe of Clinton’s emails.
The report also detailed the communications by Strzok and others criticizing Trump.
While strongly criticizing the way the Clinton investigation was handled, the inspector general ultimately found no evidence that bias affected the decision not to bring charges against her.
Strzok was recently escorted from the FBI building as his disciplinary process winds through the system, his lawyer has said.