Albuquerque Journal

Haggling slows Russia probes

Bannon testimony set for end of month

- BY CHAD DAY AND TOM LOBIANCO

WASHINGTON — The White House and lawmakers haggled Thursday over what former chief strategist Steve Bannon and other top aides to President Donald Trump can tell Congress as it investigat­es possible connection­s with Russia.

Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have been critical of the White House’s sweeping interpreta­tion of executive privilege and its contention that pretty much everything is off limits until the president says it’s not.

Bannon had been subpoenaed to return to the House Intelligen­ce Committee on Thursday to face additional questions about his interactio­ns with the president, but documents obtained by The Associated Press show he now has until the week of Jan. 29. The committee gave him more time to “clarify the White House’s instructio­ns” regarding what he can tell lawmakers, the documents show.

The postponeme­nt of Bannon’s interview came after his attorney, Bill Burck, sent a letter to the committee, arguing that it had failed to give him proper time to respond or review documents the committee may want to ask him about. According to the letter, obtained by the AP, the committee asked Burck to work with the White House to define the scope of the “privilege the President may wish to assert” over Bannon.

The negotiatio­ns will put Burck in the position of working out what one of his clients — Bannon — can say with an office overseen by another client, White House counsel Don McGahn. Burck is representi­ng McGahn in special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into contacts between the Trump campaign and Russia.

While those negotiatio­ns continue, a scheduled interview for Friday with longtime Trump aide Hope Hicks was postponed, according to a person familiar with the committee’s investigat­ion. A new date for her interview has not been set, said the person who spoke on condition of anonymity because the person wasn’t authorized to speak publicly about the matter.

Bannon is expected to cooperate with Mueller, and if the White House attempts to invoke privilege to keep him from answering Mueller’s questions, it would be a departure from other White House interviews.

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