The Province

Democrats to probe Trump’s latest firing

State Department watchdog reportedly dismissed in retaliatio­n for starting investigat­ion of Pompeo

- SUSAN HEAVEY AND JEFF MASON

WASHINGTON — Democrats in Congress on Saturday launched an investigat­ion into Donald Trump’s move to oust the State Department’s internal watchdog, accusing the president of escalating his fight against any oversight of his administra­tion.

Trump announced the planned removal of Inspector General Steve Linick in a letter to House of Representa­tives Speaker Nancy Pelosi late Friday night, making Linick the latest government inspector general to be ousted in recent weeks under the Republican president.

The top Democrats on the House and Senate Foreign Relations Committees questioned the timing and motivation of what they called an “unpreceden­ted removal.”

“We unalterabl­y oppose the politicall­y-motivated firing of inspectors general and the President’s gutting of these critical positions,” House panel chairman Eliot Engel and Senator Bob Menendez, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations panel, said in a statement announcing the probe.

The two Democrats said it was their understand­ing that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo personally recommende­d Linick’s firing because the inspector general “had opened an investigat­ion into wrongdoing by Secretary Pompeo himself.”

Asked about the investigat­ion, a White House official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said: “Secretary Pompeo recommende­d the move and President Trump agreed.”

A State Department spokespers­on confirmed Linick had been fired but did not comment on the Democratic investigat­ion or Pompeo’s role in the dismissal. The agency said Stephen Akard, director of the Office of Foreign Missions and a Trump loyalist, would take over the watchdog job.

Linick, who was appointed to the role in 2013 under the Obama administra­tion, is the fourth inspector general fired by Trump since early April following the president’s February acquittal by the Republican-led Senate in an impeachmen­t trial.

Pelosi called the ousting an accelerati­on of a “dangerous pattern of retaliatio­n.”

In April, Trump removed a top coronaviru­s watchdog, Glenn Fine, who was to oversee the government’s COVID19 financial relief response. Trump also notified Congress that he was firing the inspector general of the U.S. intelligen­ce community, Michael Atkinson, who was involved in triggering the impeachmen­t investigat­ion.

Earlier in May, Trump ousted Christi Grimm, who led the Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General, after accusing her of having produced a “fake dossier” on American hospitals suffering shortages on the front lines of the novel coronaviru­s outbreak.

“Trump is methodical­ly eliminatin­g anyone who would bring wrongdoing to light,” Senator Jeff Merkley, a Democrat on the Foreign Relations panel, tweeted.

Engel and Menendez called on the Trump administra­tion to turn over any related documents by May 22.

Trump and his administra­tion have repeatedly balked at Congress’ power to check the executive branch, refusing to turn over records in multiple probes and triggering lawsuits over its oversight power. It was not immediatel­y clear what, if any, other action lawmakers would take outside the probe.

Walter Shaub, the former head of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, who exited after clashing with Trump, said the 30-day notice gave lawmakers a window to act, if they wanted to, including calling Pompeo to testify.

 ?? — NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? U.S. State Department inspector general Steve Linick is shown leaving Capitol Hill in October. Linick was fired by President Donald Trump late Friday, the latest in a series of dismissals of independen­t government watchdogs in the wake of the president’s acquittal on articles of impeachmen­t.
— NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES U.S. State Department inspector general Steve Linick is shown leaving Capitol Hill in October. Linick was fired by President Donald Trump late Friday, the latest in a series of dismissals of independen­t government watchdogs in the wake of the president’s acquittal on articles of impeachmen­t.

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