Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mueller getting invitation

Graham wants Russia-probe details from ex-special counsel.

- CATIE EDMONDSON

WASHINGTON — Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said Sunday that he would call former special counsel Robert Mueller to testify about the investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election and ties to the Trump campaign.

The announceme­nt, part of an election-year bid by Senate Republican­s to discredit the inquiry, came after Mueller broke a nearly yearlong silence Saturday in an oped for The Washington

Post in which he defended his office’s prosecutio­n of Roger Stone and its broader investigat­ion. President Donald Trump had brought the investigat­ion, which consumed much of his early presidency, to the fore again when he commuted Stone’s sentence Friday, and the White House issued a lengthy statement denouncing Mueller’s investigat­ion and the “overzealou­s prosecutor­s” who pursued Stone’s conviction.

“Apparently Mr. Mueller is willing — and also capable — of defending the Mueller investigat­ion through an oped in the Washington Post,” Graham wrote on Twitter. “Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee have previously requested

Mr. Mueller appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee to testify about his investigat­ion. That request will be granted.”

A spokeswoma­n for the committee confirmed Sunday that it was preparing a formal invitation to Mueller.

While the special counsel’s investigat­ion did not establish a criminal conspiracy between Trump’s campaign and Russia, it did outline numerous contacts between them and documented several instances when Trump took actions to impede the inquiry. Since the release of the special counsel’s report last year, Republican­s have sought to cast doubt on its conclusion­s by tarnishing Mueller and his investigat­ors and painting the Trump campaign as victims of malicious overreach by law enforcemen­t officials.

Last month, Republican­s on the Senate Judiciary Committee voted to give themselves expansive authority to subpoena dozens of national security aides and several high-ranking Obama administra­tion officials, and Graham signaled that he would hold public hearings highlighti­ng errors and omissions by investigat­ors that had been uncovered by a Justice Department inspector general. A similar investigat­ion is being taken up by Republican­s on the Senate Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee.

“We need to look long and hard at how the Mueller investigat­ion got off the rails,” Graham said before the vote. “This committee is not going to sit on the sidelines and move on.”

Democrats have said Graham is wasting the committee’s time when the panel should be taking up issues including the effects of the coronaviru­s pandemic and racial discrimina­tion in policing. They have accused Republican­s of using the committee as a tool of electoral politics.

The effort mirrors one by Trump himself to rewrite the narrative of the Russia investigat­ion. Late last week, he vented that neither his administra­tion nor Republican­s were adequately investigat­ing unsubstant­iated accusation­s that former President Barack Obama mastermind­ed a plot to spy on his campaign.

“No Republican Senate Judiciary response, NO ‘JUSTICE’, NO FBI, NO NOTHING,” Trump wrote on Twitter.

The president continued that effort Friday evening as he commuted the sentence of Stone, a longtime friend and former campaign adviser, just before he was set to serve a 40-month sentence in federal prison. He was convicted of obstructin­g a congressio­nal investigat­ion into Trump’s 2016 campaign and ties to Russia, with prosecutor­s convincing jurors that he lied under oath, withheld a trove of documents and threatened an associate with harm if he cooperated with congressio­nal investigat­ors. Stone has maintained his innocence.

In announcing the commutatio­n, the White House condemned Mueller’s office, calling his prosecutor­s “out of control” and “desperate for splashy headlines to compensate for a failed investigat­ion.”

In his rebuttal in The Post, Mueller said he felt “compelled to respond both to broad claims that our investigat­ion was illegitima­te” and to “specific claims that Roger Stone was a victim of our office.”

“We made every decision in Stone’s case, as in all our cases, based solely on the facts and the law and in accordance with the rule of law,” Mueller wrote. “The women and men who conducted these investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns acted with the highest integrity. Claims to the contrary are false.”

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