Los Angeles Times

GOP memo drama heats up

As House panel OKs Democrats’ response to GOP document, politician­s are digging in for war of attrition.

- By Chris Megerian chris.megerian@latimes.com

A House committee approves the release of a Democratic rebuttal as both sides dig in for a fight.

WASHINGTON — It is a dubious distinctio­n, but in the Donald Trump era, a single shorthand phrase — “the memo” — now connotes some of the same breathless intrigue, cloak-and-dagger characters and partisan fire of distant political scandals, from Watergate to Whitewater.

Just as those cases took on a life of their own, the high drama over the Republican memo — and the dispute over whether it shows wrongdoing by the FBI and Justice Department — just heated up Monday.

Republican­s vowed to keep investigat­ing what they see as anti-Trump bias in the government, Democrats pushed for the release of their own classified document, and President Trump tweeted insults and praise from the sidelines.

By day’s end, Democrats were pleased when the House Intelligen­ce Committee unanimousl­y approved the release of their rebuttal to the four-page Republican memo that was put out Friday. That alone ensures the controvers­y will stay in the headlines and on cable news.

“We think this will help inform the public of the many distortion­s and inaccuraci­es” in the Republican memo, Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Burbank), the ranking Democrat on the committee, told reporters.

The Democratic document now goes to the White House, which will have five days to give it a legal and national security review. Trump could then decide to declassify it, as he did with the Republican version, or keep it under wraps.

It’s unclear what the president will do, but on Monday morning, he blasted Schiff in personal terms and said he “must be stopped!”

“Little Adam Schiff, who is desperate to run for higher office, is one of the biggest liars and leakers in Washington,” Trump tweeted. (Schiff later said that John F. Kelly, the White House chief of staff, should give the president “a timeout,” according to CNN.)

Trump also showed his appreciati­on for Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Tulare), the House Intelligen­ce Committee chairman who spearheade­d the GOP memo.

The president tweeted that Nunes is “a man of tremendous courage and grit” and “may someday be recognized as a Great American Hero for what he has exposed and what he has had to endure!”

The White House said the Democrats’ memo would be treated fairly.

“We will consider it along the same terms that we considered the Nunes memo,” Principal Deputy Press Secretary Raj Shah said.

The rival memos focus on what the FBI and Justice Department disclosed to a special court when they sought a 90-day warrant to eavesdrop on Carter Page less than three weeks before the 2016 election. Page already had left his post as a foreign policy advisor on the Trump campaign amid questions about his Russian contacts.

The Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act warrant was renewed three times — by separate FISA court judges, including once after Trump had taken office.

Although Democrats and Republican­s reviewed the same classified materials provided to the FISA judges, they’ve reached starkly different conclusion­s about what they mean.

Republican­s insist the FBI and Department of Justice improperly failed to disclose that some of the intelligen­ce on Page came from a former British spy working from a Democratic-funded opposition research group that was looking at Trump’s alleged ties to Russia.

Some Republican­s go further, saying senior officials at the FBI deliberate­ly misinforme­d the court to gin up an investigat­ion to tilt the election to Hillary Clinton or ultimately to undermine Trump’s presidency.

Democrats have said there’s no reason to think the four judges would have rejected the warrant applicatio­n had they known of the former spy’s alleged proClinton views.

Moreover, Democrats say, the FBI didn’t seek the FISA applicatio­n on Page until three months after it already had started a fullscale counterint­elligence investigat­ion into Russian meddling with the election.

According to the Republican memo, the trigger was George Papadopoul­os, a foreign policy aide to the Trump campaign who had offered to help set up meetings with the Kremlin. He reportedly confided to an Australian diplomat that the Russians had dirt on Clinton, and the diplomat shared it with U.S. authoritie­s.

Trump isn’t having any of it. On Saturday, he tweeted that the Republican memo “vindicates” him from the “Russian Witch Hunt.”

Stewart Baker, who was a senior policy official at the Department of Homeland Security during George W. Bush’s presidency, had a more jaundiced view.

“The Nunes memo is clearly an advocacy piece, in the sense that they assembled the facts that would be most helpful in making their case,” Baker said. “When you have an advocacy memo like that, you need to see the facts from the other side.”

Nunes declined to speak to reporters after the committee vote Monday.

For now, politician­s on both sides appear to be digging in for a war of attrition that could determine whether voters trust the conclusion­s of the investigat­ion led by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III.

Ron Hosko, a former FBI official who now serves as president of the Law Enforcemen­t Legal Defense Fund, drew a contrast between Mueller’s quiet work and the partisan bickering on the House committee.

“They cannot tell you the sky is blue in a joint fashion,” Hosko said. “How can the American public have trust in them?”

He added, “All we have is a food fight.”

 ?? Win McNamee Getty Images ?? REP. ADAM SCHIFF (D-Burbank) leaves a House Intelligen­ce Committee meeting at which members OKd the release of the Democrats’ rebuttal of a GOP memo, which alleges anti-Trump bias in the government.
Win McNamee Getty Images REP. ADAM SCHIFF (D-Burbank) leaves a House Intelligen­ce Committee meeting at which members OKd the release of the Democrats’ rebuttal of a GOP memo, which alleges anti-Trump bias in the government.

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