Lodi News-Sentinel

Barr OK to declassify documents in election 2016 probe

- By John Harney and Margaret Talev

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Thursday gave Attorney General William Barr “full and complete authority” to declassify informatio­n related to his inquiry into investigat­ions of the 2016 presidenti­al election.

The president, in a memorandum, directed U.S. intelligen­ce agencies to cooperate with Barr’s review, which he has said would look into allegation­s by Trump and his allies that his campaign was spied upon and that various figures in the Justice Department and the FBI were trying to undermine him.

“Today’s action will help ensure that all Americans learn the truth about the events that occurred, and the actions that were taken, during the last presidenti­al election and will restore confidence in our public institutio­ns,” the White House said in a press release Thursday night.

Even as the president has granted his attorney general greater power to look into what led to the appointmen­t of special counsel Robert Mueller, the White House has refused to allow Rep. Jerrold Nadler’s Judiciary Committee see the un-redacted version of Mueller’s report on Russian interferen­ce in the election, or the underlying evidence.

Trump has invoked executive privilege to prevent former White House counsel Don McGahn from handing over documents to Nadler’s panel. His fierce determinat­ion to fight “all the subpoenas” has kindled demands by a growing number of Democrats to begin impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

The president, on the other hand, has long asserted that Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the campaign was politicall­y motivated and concocted from false allegation­s. “They want to look at how the whole hoax got started,” Trump said earlier this month. He denied that he had asked Barr to investigat­e Mueller’s investigat­ion, but said of him: “I am so proud of our attorney general that he is looking into it. I think it’s great.”

FBI Director Christophe­r Wray testified before a Senate committee that he wasn’t aware of any improper spying, a comment Trump said he found “ridiculous.”

The notion of a so-called deep state plotting against Trump since before his election has been a rallying cry for his supporters and a theme touched on by figures sympatheti­c to the president, including Fox television host Sean Hannity. The directive gives the attorney general a path to selectivel­y declassify material that may feed that narrative while pieces of the fuller picture may remain classified.

Ned Price, a former CIA senior analyst and national security spokesman in the Obama administra­tion, called the directive “a pretty brazen effort by Trump and Barr to place their thumbs on the scale, bestowing on the attorney general authoritie­s that weren’t afforded to those leading investigat­ions into other elements of the Trump-Russia saga.”

“It’s just another indication that Trump wants to make this about the purported wrongdoing on the part of the FBI and DOJ, rather than his team’s own efforts to conspire with the Russians.”

Barr told the Senate Judiciary Committee that the Justice Department would determine whether there was any improper “spying” on the Trump campaign, including whether intelligen­ce collection began earlier than previously known and how many confidenti­al informants the FBI used. He suggested his focus was on senior leaders at the FBI and Justice Department at the time.

His review will also examine whether a dossier that included salacious accusation­s against Trump was fabricated by the Russian government to dupe U.S. intelligen­ce agencies and the FBI, Barr has said.

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