Lodi News-Sentinel

Lawmakers call for investigat­ion into Flynn, but balk at special panel.

- By Matthew Schofield, William Douglas and Lindsay Wise

WASHINGTON — Republican­s and Democrats want Michael Flynn to testify before Congress about his dealings with Russia, and they want the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee to look deep into the reasons behind the resignatio­n that rocked Washington on Tuesday.

“I think it’s likely that Gen. Flynn will be at some point asked to come and talk to the committee,” said Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., a committee member.

Blunt said Flynn would probably be asked to talk about “both post-election activities and any other activities that he would be aware of.”

But the GOP won’t seek a special panel, such as the one Republican­s in the House of Representa­tives created in 2012 when they had questions about former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s involvemen­t in that year’s Benghazi attacks.

“Hell, we talked about Benghazi . ... This is a legitimate controvers­y,” said Rep. Keith Ellison of Minnesota, who’s seeking the Democratic National Committee chairmansh­ip. “A national security adviser was found cavorting with a hostile foreign power against a sitting president. If you can investigat­e Planned Parenthood and Benghazi, how in the world does Mike Flynn avoid investigat­ion?”

This time, they were careful about a robust challenge to President Donald Trump.

“With regard to White House personnel decisions, it’s the president’s call,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. “Everybody at the White House serves at the pleasure” of the White House.

Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C. — who chairs the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, one of several congressio­nal panels that’s investigat­ing alleged Russian email hacking and attempts to influence last year’s American election — echoed McConnell’s sentiments.

“Mike Flynn served his country with distinctio­n,” Burr said in a statement. “The president needs a national security adviser whom he can trust and I defer to him to decide who best fills that role.”

Instead, Republican­s said that existing Senate and House committees were sufficient to address the degree to which Russia has sought influence in U.S. politics and the recent election.

Their tone was far different in 2012 after a U.S. ambassador, another embassy official and two private security workers died in the Benghazi attack. The Republican-led House created a special committee to investigat­e and the issue dragged out for years, a potential embarrassm­ent for Clinton, who was running for president.

With that example fresh in their minds, some Democrats on Tuesday wanted the same sort of probe of Flynn’s involvemen­t with Russia.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, called for a special counsel to look into allegation­s against Flynn.

“This issue is about more than just a phone call to the Russian ambassador,” Blumenthal said. “It is about the integrity and honesty of public officials.”

Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., another committee member, said it was important for the Senate and the public to know exactly how long the Trump administra­tion had known

that Flynn had lied about his dealings with Russians, yet failed to act. She said Flynn had to be brought in to testify.

“We have to have an independen­t committee that can call witnesses under oath and in public,” she said. “Russia is not our friend. Putin is not our friend. And this is not a matter of just Flynn.”

Other Republican­s spoke in stern terms about what they wanted in the intelligen­ce investigat­ion but stopped short of any Benghazi-style probe. “I’m open to any suggestion­s that are constructi­ve and not necessaril­y politicall­y motivated,” said Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C. “I think a part of that will come from learning the facts now that the president has made a decision.”

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who had been calling for an independen­t investigat­ion into Russian involvemen­t in U.S. elections, saw no reason now to create a special committee.

“Let’s wait and see what facts come out here first,” McCain, the chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said Tuesday. “There are obviously serious questions that need to be answered, but to leap to the conclusion that you need a commission, that’s just foolish.”

The Senate did handle the Benghazi investigat­ion in its Intelligen­ce Committee.

The gist of the allegation­s that led to Flynn’s resignatio­n — that Russians were seeking or exerting too much influence on the Trump administra­tion and American democracy — is hardly new.

Congress has wide leeway as to how it may proceed. It can launch independen­t investigat­ions into Russian actions and influence. It has subpoena power and can compel those involved to testify under oath. Congress controls the intelligen­ce community.

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