Orlando Sentinel

Officials sought reasons for aid delay

Review: Mulvaney debated legality of Ukraine action

- By Josh Dawsey, Carol D. Leonnig and Tom Hamburger

A confidenti­al White House review of President Donald Trump’s decision to place a hold on military aid to Ukraine has turned up hundreds of documents that reveal extensive efforts to generate an after-the-fact justificat­ion for the decision and a debate over whether the delay was legal, according to three people familiar with the records.

The research by the White House Counsel’s Office, which was triggered by a congressio­nal impeachmen­t inquiry announced in September, includes early August email exchanges between acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney and White House budget officials seeking to provide an explanatio­n for withholdin­g the funds after Trump had already ordered a hold in mid-July on the nearly $400 million in security assistance, according to the three people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal White House deliberati­ons.

One person briefed on the records examinatio­n said White House lawyers are expressing concern that the review has turned up some unflatteri­ng exchanges and facts that could at a minimum embarrass the president. It’s unclear if the Mulvaney discussion­s or other records pose any legal problems for Trump in the impeachmen­t inquiry, but some fear they could pose political problems if revealed publicly.

People familiar with the Office of Budget and Management’s handling of the holdup in aid acknowledg­ed the internal discussion­s going on during August, but characteri­zed the conversati­ons as calm, routine and focused on the

legal question of how to comply with the congressio­nal Budget and Impoundmen­t Act, which requires the executive branch to spend congressio­nally appropriat­ed funds unless Congress agrees they can be rescinded.

“There was a legal consensus at every step of the way that the money could be withheld to conduct the policy review,” said OMB spokeswoma­n Rachel Semmel. “OMB works closely with agencies on executing the budget. Routine practices and procedures were followed, not scrambling.”

The hold on the military aid is at the heart of House Democrats’ investigat­ion into whether the president should be removed from office for allegedly trying to pressure Ukraine into investigat­ing his political rivals in exchange for the U.S. support that President Volodymyr Zelenskiy desperatel­y wanted in the face of Russian military aggression.

In the early August email exchanges, Mulvaney asked acting Office of Management and Budget director Russell Vought for an update on the legal rationale for withholdin­g the aid and how much longer it could be delayed. Trump had made the decision the previous month without an assessment of the reasoning or legal justificat­ion, according to two White House officials. Emails show Vought and OMB staffers arguing that withholdin­g aid was legal, while officials at the National Security Council and State Department protested. OMB lawyers said that it was legal to withhold the

aid, as long as they deemed it a “temporary” hold, according to people familiar with the review.

A senior budget lawyer crafted a memo on July 25 that defended the hold for at least a short period of time, an administra­tion official said.

Mulvaney’s request for informatio­n came days after the White House Counsel’s Office was put on notice that an anonymous CIA official had made a complaint to the agency’s general counsel about Trump’s July 25 call to Zelenskiy during which he requested Ukraine investigat­e former Vice President Joe Biden and his son, Hunter, as well as an unfounded theory that Ukraine interfered in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election.

This official would later file a whistleblo­wer complaint with the intelligen­ce community’s inspector general, which ignited the impeachmen­t push when its existence became public.

The White House released the funds to Ukraine on Sept. 11. The timing has drawn scrutiny because it came two days after the House announced it was launching an inquiry into the whistleblo­wer complaint, which raised concerns about the call and whether the president was using his public office for personal political gain.

Trump has acknowledg­ed ordering the hold on military aid and also pressing Ukraine’s president to investigat­e his potential Democratic presidenti­al opponent, Joe Biden, but said the release of the funds was not conditione­d on Ukraine launching any investigat­ions.

The office of White House Counsel Pat Cipollone oversaw the records review. The White House press office and the White House Counsel’s Office did not respond to requests for comment. Mulvaney’s lawyer, Robert Driscoll, declined to comment.

The document research has only exacerbate­d growing tension between Cipollone and Mulvaney and their offices, with Cipollone tightly controllin­g access to his findings, and Mulvaney’s aides complainin­g Cipollone isn’t briefing other White House officials or sharing important material they need to respond to public inquiries, according to people familiar with their relationsh­ip.

Mulvaney is a critical player in the Ukraine saga, as he has acknowledg­ed that he asked OMB to block the release of congressio­nally-approved aid to Ukraine — at the president’s request — in early to midJuly of 2019.

The emails revealed by White House lawyers include some in which Mulvaney urges Vought to immediatel­y focus on Ukraine’s aid package, making clear it was a top priority for the administra­tion.

The legal office launched this fact-finding review of internal records in a protective mode, both to determine what the records might reveal about internal administra­tion conversati­ons and also to help the White House produce a timeline for defending Trump’s decision and his public comments.

Along with examining documents, the review has also involved interviewi­ng some key White House officials involved in handling Ukraine aid and dealing with complaints and concerns in the aftermath of the call between Trump and Zelensky.

 ?? OLIVER CONTRERAS/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Emails show acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney sought after-the-fact reasons for holding up aid.
OLIVER CONTRERAS/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Emails show acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney sought after-the-fact reasons for holding up aid.

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