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‘Nonsense’: Powerful Republican denounces White House informatio­n shut-out

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - An already contentiou­s move by Republican President Donald Trump to block opposition Democratic lawmakers from getting informatio­n about his administra­tion received its most scathing criticism yet on Friday - from one of the most powerful Republican members of the U.S. Senate.

Judiciary Committee chairman Chuck Grassley of Iowa, in a more than 2,100-word letter to the White House, asked Trump to rescind unpreceden­ted guidance that told executive agencies they do not have to honor requests for informatio­n from lawmakers in the minority party, currently the Democrats.

This week in hearings all over Capitol Hill members of both parties have criticized the informatio­n block. Democrats have posited that the Trump administra­tion is trying to hide mistakes, problems or wrongdoing from them.

Grassley, who has served in the Senate since 1981, called the guidance “nonsense” and described it as “a bureaucrat­ic effort by the Office of Legal Counsel to insulate the executive branch from scrutiny by the elected representa­tives of the American people.”

The Judiciary Committee has jurisdicti­on over the Justice Department and its Office of Legal Counsel, which published the guidance last month.

Grassley said it goes against the U.S. Constituti­on by misreprese­nting how Congress functions and trying to tell the legislativ­e branch how to do its job. It also impedes Democratic lawmakers’ ability to check up on the president, a responsibi­lity also laid out in the constituti­on, Grassley wrote in a letter replete with footnotes and case citations.

“I know from experience that a partisan response to oversight only discourage­s bipartisan­ship, decreases transparen­cy, and diminishes the crucial role of the American people’s elected representa­tives,” he wrote. “Oversight brings transparen­cy, and transparen­cy brings accountabi­lity.”

The Justice Department declined to comment on Grassley’s letter or the guidance. The White House did not return a request for comment.

The Office of Legal Counsel has not explained the impetus for publishing the opinion.

The guidance did not single out Democrats by name. Instead, it addressed informatio­n requests to executive agencies from the highestran­king lawmaker from the minority party sitting on congressio­nal committees, called ranking members.

The Republican­s hold the majority in both the Senate and U.S. House of Representa­tives and therefore chair all the committees, with Democrats as ranking members.

The opinion said that agencies only have to respond to informatio­n requests from committee chairs. Ranking member requests “do not trigger any obligation to accommodat­e congressio­nal needs and are not legally enforceabl­e through a subpoena or contempt proceeding­s,” it said.

 ??  ?? Chuck Grassley
Chuck Grassley

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