Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Dems seeking to compel election security briefings

- Laurie Kellman

WASHINGTON – Racing the political clock, frustrated Democrats on Sunday searched for a way to force the Trump administra­tion to continue briefing Congress in person about foreign attempts to interfere in the November election.

The director of national intelligen­ce, John Ratcliffe, said most briefings on what the administra­tion knows about efforts to influence the vote will now be given to Congress in writing. In the past, delivering “all-member” briefings in-person, he said, has resulted in “leaks” for political purposes within moments.

“A falsehood, yet again another lie by the president,” responded Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff, chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee.

Ratcliffe said those lawmakers who are “entitled to the briefings and classified informatio­n will still get that informatio­n” and that the briefings would be “primarily in writing.”

“What we won’t be doing is all-member briefings, to all members of the House and all members of the Senate,” he said.

It was unclear which lawmakers would receive the intelligen­ce material and how giving them the assessment­s in writing would reduce leaks.

Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden blasted the administra­tion for trying to hide well-documented efforts by Russia to help Trump politicall­y. The decision on briefings, Biden said in a statement, shows that Trump is “hoping Vladimir Putin will once more boost his candidacy and cover his horrific failures to lead our country through the multiple crises we are facing.”

Schiff, D-Calif., said his committee could demand that Ratcliffe or other intelligen­ce officials testify under oath, but that decision would be made by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

An official with Schiff’s committee said Ratcliffe’s decision was unexpected because Ratcliffe’s office earlier had reached out to schedule an in-person briefing to the committee on Sept. 17. A room on Capitol Hill had already been reserved, according to the official, who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

“We will compel the intelligen­ce community to give Congress the informatio­n that we need,” Schiff said.

Ratcliffe insisted that China is the graver threat to election security than Russia. Earlier this month, the nation’s counterint­elligence chief, William Evanina, issued a statement saying U.S. intelligen­ce officials believe Russia is using various methods to denigrate Biden and that people linked to Russian President Putin are boosting Trump’s reelection bid. U.S. officials also believe China does not want Trump to win a second term and has accelerate­d its criticism of the White House, Evanina wrote.

Maine Sen. Angus King, a member of the Senate committee, said the idea the national intelligen­ce director’s office would stop briefing Congress on foreign threats to the election is “an outrage.”

“America’s election – indeed, our foundation of democracy itself – is under threat as we face weaponized disinforma­tion from global foes around the planet,” King said in a statement. “To stifle and limit the American peoples’ awareness of this fact cannot be explained – or allowed.”

 ?? NEW YORK TIMES VIA AP, POOL ?? National Intelligen­ce Director John Ratcliffe told Congress he’ll no longer provide in-person election security briefings.
NEW YORK TIMES VIA AP, POOL National Intelligen­ce Director John Ratcliffe told Congress he’ll no longer provide in-person election security briefings.

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