Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

McCarthy won’t cooperate with Jan. 6 panel

- Farnoush Amiri and Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON – House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy is refusing a request by the House panel investigat­ing the U.S. Capitol insurrecti­on to submit to an interview and turn over records pertaining to the deadly riot.

The panel is seeking firsthand details from members of Congress on then-President Donald Trump’s actions on the day hundreds of his supporters brutally beat police, stormed the building and interrupte­d the certification of the 2020 presidenti­al election.

McCarthy, R-Calif., issued a statement Wednesday refusing to cooperate with the House committee. He said the investigat­ion was not legitimate and accused the panel of “abuse of power.”

Mississipp­i Rep. Bennie Thompson, Democratic chairman of the panel, requested that McCarthy provide informatio­n to the nine-member panel about his conversati­ons with Trump “before, during and after” the riot. The request also seeks informatio­n about McCarthy’s communicat­ions with then-White House chief of staff Mark Meadows in the days before the attack.

McCarthy told Fox News Channel on Thursday that he had nothing to add beyond his media interviews after the riot. He claimed that some members of the House panel want “to deny me ever the chance to be speaker” if Republican­s retake the House in 2022 midterm elections.

In his letter, Thompson said the panel “must learn about how the President’s plans for January 6th came together, and all the other ways he attempted to alter the results of the election. For example, in advance of January 6th, you reportedly explained to Mark Meadows and the former President that objections to the certification of the electoral votes on January 6th ‘was doomed to fail.’ ”

It remains unclear whether the panel will be able to gain testimony from McCarthy or any other congressio­nal allies of Trump. While the committee has considered subpoenain­g fellow lawmakers, that would be an extraordin­ary move and could run up against legal and political challenges.

The panel is seeking a window into Trump’s state of mind from an ally who has acknowledg­ed repeated interactio­ns with the then-president. The committee also wants to question McCarthy about communicat­ions with Trump and White House staff in the week after the violence, including a conversati­on with Trump that was reportedly heated.

The committee acknowledg­ed the sensitive and unusual nature of its request as it proposed a meeting with McCarthy on either Feb. 3 or 4. “The Select Committee has tremendous respect for the prerogativ­es of Congress and the privacy of its Members,” Thompson wrote. “At the same time, we have a solemn responsibi­lity to investigat­e fully the facts.”

Democrats have been seeking more informatio­n about McCarthy’s communicat­ions with Trump since the former president’s second impeachmen­t trial last year. At one point in the trial, Democrats said they would try and call Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler, RWash., as a witness because she had described a potentiall­y pivotal call between the two men after hearing an account from McCarthy.

Herrera Beutler’s statement said McCarthy told her he had asked Trump to publicly “call off the riot” and had said the violent mob was made up of Trump supporters, not far-left antifa members, as Trump initially claimed.

She said in the statement, “That’s when, according to McCarthy, the president said, ‘Well, Kevin, I guess these people are more upset about the election than you are.’ ”

In the end, Democrats read a statement from Herrera Beutler into the record. Trump, who had just left office, was acquitted by the Senate.

McCarthy had initially criticized Trump’s actions after the 2020 election, saying he “bears responsibi­lity” for the deadly Jan. 6 attack, which remains the most serious domestic assault on the building in its history.

“The saddest day I have ever had” in Congress, McCarthy said the night of the attack, even as he went on to join 138 other House Republican­s in voting to reject election results.

The latest request from the panel also puts McCarthy face to face with its vice chair, Rep. Liz Cheney, whom he dumped from the No. 3 House leadership position last summer as her very public criticism of Trump’s falsehoods about his 2020 election loss reverberat­ed through the Republican Party.

The GOP leader had counseled Cheney to stay on message, but as she continued to warn the party off Trump’s falsehoods, McCarthy groomed a newly transforme­d Trump acolyte, Rep. Elise Stefanik, RN.Y., as her replacemen­t.

McCarthy is the third member of Congress to whom the committee has reached out for voluntary informatio­n. In the past few weeks, GOP Reps. Jim Jordan and Scott Perry were also contacted by the panel but have denied the requests to sit down with lawmakers or provide documents.

The panel, made up of seven Democrats and two Republican­s, has interviewe­d almost 350 people and issued public subpoenas to around 50 people and organizati­ons as it seeks to create a comprehens­ive record of the Jan. 6 attack and the events leading up to it.

On Wednesday, former White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany spoke to the panel virtually, according to a person familiar with the interview who requested anonymity to discuss it. The committee subpoenaed McEnany in November.

The committee says the extraordin­ary trove of material it has collected – 35,000 pages of records so far, including texts, emails and phone records from people close to Trump – is fleshing out critical details of the attack, which played out on live television.

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