Bangkok Post

Dems shift tack in paper saga

White House claims GOP faking outrage

-

WASHINGTON: The White House said on Tuesday it would respond in “good faith” to inquiries from lawmakers about the improper storage of classified documents at President Joe Biden’s home and former office while accusing Republican­s of hypocrisy in how they were pursuing the issue.

On Saturday, the Democratic president’s counsel said five additional pages with classified markings were discovered at Mr Biden’s Wilmington, Delaware, home, and that those documents were immediatel­y handed to Justice Department officials.

Aides previously found another batch of classified documents at his residence, and at a Washington think tank where he had an office after his time as vice president in the Obama administra­tion. US Attorney General Merrick Garland has named a special counsel to probe the issue.

The White House has largely been on the defensive since the initial revelation­s that the documents had been found. Nothing about the matter was disclosed to the public until early January. Mr Biden’s lawyers made their initial discovery of classified material at the start of November, before the midterm elections that determined which party controls Congress.

That has led to accusation­s from Republican­s that Mr Biden’s team is not being forthcomin­g about the discoverie­s.

The department is separately probing Mr Trump’s handling of highly sensitive classified documents that he retained at his Florida resort after leaving the White House in January 2021.

White House spokesman Ian Sams on Tuesday sought to compare the issue to the drawn-out drama that led to the election of Republican leader Kevin McCarthy as speaker of the House of Representa­tives earlier this month.

“They’re faking outrage about disclosure and transparen­cy at the same time, for example, that they will not ask their speaker to release the secret deals that he made in order to get support from the far-right extreme Maga members of his caucus,” Mr Sams told reporters, referencin­g former Mr Trump’s “Make America Great Again” slogan.

“We’re learning drip by drip, bit by bit, the kinds of things he gave away in those negotiatio­ns and the serious impact they have on the American public,” Mr Sams said.

To get the speaker role, Mr McCarthy agreed to major concession­s, including a rule that means that any of the 435 House members could force a vote for his removal at any time. Mr McCarthy has said more data was needed about the Biden documents, including whether there were “more out there.”

The briefing by Mr Sams, a spokesman who works with the White House counsel’s office, appeared designed in part to reclaim the offensive in the midst of Republican criticism and questions about the time it took to inform the public about the documents.

Mr Sams said regular disclosure­s during an investigat­ion posed risks that answers may be incomplete. He said some questions may not be answered until the probe was complete.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Secret Service vehicles are seen parked in the driveway leading to the US President Joe Biden’s house in Wilmington, Delaware on Sunday.
REUTERS Secret Service vehicles are seen parked in the driveway leading to the US President Joe Biden’s house in Wilmington, Delaware on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand