San Francisco Chronicle

Lawmakers get 1st look at classified informatio­n

- By Mary Clare Jalonick and Eric Tucker Mary Clare Jalonick and Eric Tucker are Associated Press writers.

WASHINGTON — Republican and Democratic lawmakers on Thursday huddled in classified briefings about the origins of the FBI investigat­ion into Russia’s meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election, a highly unusual series of meetings prompted by partisan allegation­s that the bureau spied on the Trump campaign.

The extraordin­ary closed-door sessions were sought by President Trump’s allies and arranged by the White House, as the president has ramped up efforts to sow suspicions about the legitimacy of the FBI investigat­ion that spawned a special counsel probe. Republican lawmakers have suggested the secret informatio­n would confirm unproved allegation­s that the bureau acted improperly when it launched the investigat­ion into ties between Russia and Trump’s campaign.

Initially offered only to Republican­s, the briefings were the latest piece of stagecraft meant to publicize and bolster such claims. But they also highlighte­d the degree to which the president and his allies have used the levers of the federal government — in this case, intelligen­ce agencies — to aide in Trump’s personal and political defense.

Under direct pressure from the president, Justice Department officials agreed to grant Republican­s’ request for the briefing, and only later opened a second briefing to a bipartisan group. The invite list evolved up until hours before the meeting — a reflection of the partisan distrust and the political wrangling. A White House lawyer, Emmet Flood, and White House Chief of Staff John Kelly showed up for both briefings, although the White House had earlier said it would keep a distance.

The White House officials didn’t attend the full briefings, the White House said Thursday in a statement, but instead delivered brief remarks communicat­ing the “president’s desire for as much openness as possible under the law” and relaying “the president’s understand­ing of the need to protect human intelligen­ce services and the importance of communicat­ion between the branches of government.”

It was unclear how much informatio­n was revealed to lawmakers. House Speaker Paul Ryan, who attended the first briefing, said he wouldn’t discuss what was said. The House Intelligen­ce Committee’s top Democrat, Adam Schiff, also would not comment.

Trump has zeroed in on, and at times embellishe­d, reports that a longtime U.S. government informant approached members of his campaign in a possible bid to glean intelligen­ce on Russian efforts to sway the election. The president intensifie­d his attacks this week, tweeting Thursday that it was “Starting to look like one of the biggest political scandals in U.S. history.”

Republican­s already eager to discredit special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion used Trump’s complaints of “spygate” to press for answers from the Justice Department, whose leaders have tried for months to balance demands from congressio­nal overseers against their obligation to protect an ongoing investigat­ion into ties between the Kremlin and the Trump campaign.

 ?? Jacquelyn Martin / Associated Press ?? FBI Director Christophe­r Wray (second from right) arrives for a meeting with legislator­s on the Russia probe. The gathering was prompted by allegation­s that the bureau spied on the Trump campaign.
Jacquelyn Martin / Associated Press FBI Director Christophe­r Wray (second from right) arrives for a meeting with legislator­s on the Russia probe. The gathering was prompted by allegation­s that the bureau spied on the Trump campaign.

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