Dayton Daily News

House panel releases redacted Democrat memo

Nunes says Dems colluding with parts of government.

- By Karoun Demirjian and David Weige Washington Post

WASHINGTON — The House Intelligen­ce Committee released a redacted version of a Democrat-written memo rebutting GOP allegation­s that federal law enforcemen­t agencies used politicall­y-biased informatio­n to conduct surveillan­ce on one of the president’s former campaign aides.

President Donald Trump had argued that making the Democrats’ memo available to the public would reveal intelligen­ce gathering sources and methods.

The 10-page document contains more classified informatio­n than the fourpage Republican memo to which it responds. Intelligen­ce Committee Democrats, led by ranking Democrat, Rep. Adam Schiff of California, had pledged to heed recommenda­tions from the FBI and Justice Department regarding any redactions of sensitive informatio­n - something, the Democrats say, the GOP did not do.

But on Saturday, committee chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif., accused Democrats of colluding with the government in a “cover up” of informatio­n as he announced the memo had been posted online.

“We actually wanted this out,” Nunes told an audience at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference. “It’s clear evidence that the Democrats are not only covering this up, but they’re also colluding with parts of the government to cover this up.”

According to a senior Democratic committee official, the Democrats on the Intelligen­ce panel have received the memo, and are reviewing it.

Democrats bristled when Trump refused to allow their full memo to be made public, accusing him of applying a double standard. He promised to release the Republican memo before he had even read it, according to White House officials and the timing of his public comments.

The GOP memo charged that the FBI and Justice Department had secured a surveillan­ce warrant against former Trump campaign aide Carter Page by relying on false informatio­n from Christophe­r Steele, the British ex-spy who wrote a now-famous dossier alleging Trump has personal and financial ties to Russia.

Democrats have argued that the informatio­n presented in the Republican-drafted memo was “cherry-picked” and lacked important context that they would present in their memo. They have said the GOP was reluctant to allow its release because the rebuttal would undercut the Republican­s’ argument.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States