Guymon Daily Herald

White House, Jan. 6 committee agree to shield some documents

- By ZEKE MILLER

WASHINGTON — The House committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the Capitol has agreed to defer its request for hundreds of pages of records from the Trump administra­tion, bending to the wishes of the Biden White House.

The deferral is in response to concerns by the Biden White House that releasing all the Trump administra­tion documents sought by the committee could compromise national security and executive privilege.

President Joe Biden has repeatedly rejected former President Donald Trump's blanket efforts to cite executive privilege to block the release of documents surroundin­g that day. But Biden's White House is still working with the committee to shield some documents from being turned over.

Trump is appealing to the Supreme Court to try to block the National Archives and Records Administra­tion, which maintains custody of the documents from his time in office, from giving them to the committee.

The agreement to keep some Trump-era records away from the committee is memorializ­ed in a Dec. 16 letter from the White House counsel's office. It mostly shields records that do not involve the events of Jan. 6 but were covered by the committee's sweeping request for documents from the Trump White House about the events of that day.

Dozen of pages created Jan. 6 don't pertain to the assault on the Capitol. Other documents involve sensitive preparatio­ns and deliberati­ons by the National Security Council. Biden's officials were worried that if those pages were turned over to Congress, that would set a troublesom­e precedent for the executive branch, no matter who is president.

Still other documents are highly classified and the White House asked Congress to work with the federal agencies that created them to discuss their release.

"The documents for which the Select Committee has agreed to withdraw or defer its request do not appear to bear on the White House's preparatio­ns for or response to the events of January 6, or on efforts to overturn the election or otherwise obstruct the peaceful transfer of power," White House deputy counsel Jonathan Su wrote in one of two letters to the committee obtained Tuesday by The Associated Press.

Su wrote that for the committee, withholdin­g the documents "should not compromise its ability to complete its critical investigat­ion expeditiou­sly."

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