El Dorado News-Times

Pompeo rejects Congress’ subpoenas for IG, Biden probe informatio­n

- By Matthew Lee AP Diplomatic Writer

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Friday rejected congressio­nal subpoenas issued for him and for the State Department to provide informatio­n and testimony to lawmakers about two politicall­y charged developmen­ts. The refusals set the stage for an escalation in the confrontat­ion between the State Department and the Democratic­controlled House ahead of November’s elections.

In letters sent to the House Foreign Affairs

Committee, Pompeo and the State Department’s acting legislativ­e affairs chief said they had no intention of complying with the subpoenas. They said the subpoenas were politicall­y motivated, without merit, and unnecessar­y as the informatio­n and testimony could be otherwise obtained. The letters were obtained by The Associated Press shortly after they were sent to Capitol Hill.

In one letter, Pompeo said committee chairman, Rep. Eliot Engel of New York, was out of line in issuing the subpoenas, which he said were “outrageous” and ignored the State Department’s good faith efforts to answer questions about the firing of the department’s inspector general and the provision of Ukrainerel­ated documents to Republican-controlled Senate committees.

Engel had issued the subpoenas on July 31 and Aug. 3, complainin­g that Pompeo and the State Department were “stonewalli­ng” repeated requests for informatio­n on both matters.

The first subpoena demanded that the State Department turn over to Engel’s committee copies of thousands of pages of documents he said the department had given to the Senate regarding former Vice President Joe Biden as well as his son,

Hunter, for his work for a gas company in Ukraine while his father was vice president.

It also asked for internal department emails about responding to Congress. It said Pompeo had delivered more than 16,000 pages of records to the Senate but refused to send the same materials to the Democrat-led House.

In response, the State Department’s acting head of legislativ­e affairs, Ryan Kaldahl, said the agency was not obliged to provide the documents to any committee not conducting its own investigat­ion into the matter. He suggested that Engel’s committee seek copies from its Senate counterpar­ts.

The second subpoena demanded the testimony of four senior State Department officials about the firing in May of department Inspector General Stephen Linick, which Democrats have alleged came in retaliatio­n for probes the watchdog was conducting into Pompeo.

In rejecting that subpoena, Pompeo said in a letter to Engel that most of the officials in question, and others, were prepared to be interviewe­d voluntaril­y and repeated that offer.

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