Miami Herald

House panel plans to launch Biden probe hours after State of the Union

- BY BILLY HOUSE AND JARRELL DILLARD

Hours after Joe Biden delivers his State of the Union Address to Congress next week, House Republican­s will launch their promised investigat­ion into alleged Biden family “influence peddling,” effectivel­y nullifying any message of unity the president may deliver.

Expected to testify at the Feb. 8 hearing are several former Twitter officials who Republican­s believe were involved in efforts to restrict access to a 2020 New York Post article about business activities and other contents of a laptop purportedl­y owned by Hunter Biden, the president’s son, a person familiar with the matter said.

House Oversight and Accountabi­lity Chairman James Comer, in a recent interview, accused the Biden family of selling “access for profit around the world to the detriment of American interests.”

The Kentucky Republican has previously said the Biden administra­tion and Big Tech have worked together to “hide informatio­n about the Biden family’s suspicious business schemes and Joe Biden’s involvemen­t.”

Biden has denied any knowledge of his son’s business dealings. Comer’s critics say the investigat­ion is political revenge reminiscen­t of the GOP’s Benghazi probe that was targeted at injuring Hillary Clinton politicall­y ahead of her 2016 presidenti­al bid.

James Baker, Twitter’s former deputy general counsel; Yoel Roth, the former head of trust and safety; and Vijaya Gadde, the former chief legal officer, were invited to testify in a Jan. 11 letter.

Jamie Raskin, the top Democrat on the panel, said any look into presidenti­al family business dealings and alleged influence peddling must also include scrutiny of former President Donald Trump’s family’s activities. Otherwise, he said in an interview, it appears to be a “hatchet job.”

In 2019, then-President Donald Trump tried to get Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to open an investigat­ion into the Bidens, an exchange that eventually led to Trump’s first impeachmen­t.

This hearing next Wednesday will specifical­ly jump right into a topic that has been a conservati­ve sore point — alleged social media collusion to suppress informatio­n tied to Hunter Biden’s abandoned laptop, a damaged MacBook Pro, dropped off at a Delaware repair shop and never recovered.

The shop owner says he turned the laptop over to the FBI and a copy of the hard drive to Rudy Giuliani, who shared it with the New York Post during the final weeks of the 2020 presidenti­al election.

The Post’s front-page article focused on an email obtained from a copy of a laptop hard drive that indicated that Hunter Biden introduced a top executive from Burisma to his father while he was vice president.

Twitter limited distributi­on of the New York Post story, blocking users from sharing links to, and pictures of, the story. A Twitter spokesman at the time said it was in line with its hacked-materials policy. Twitter received backlash for the move and eventually revised its policy.

Later reporting by other news organizati­ons backed the authentici­ty of the material cited by the Post, fueling criticism that social media platforms and mainstream media had suppressed legitimate news.

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