Santa Fe New Mexican

Senate GOP pushes Russia inquiry

Committee seeking to discredit previous Trump investigat­ion

- By Nicholas Fandos

Senate Republican­s plunged forward Thursday with an election-year bid to discredit the Trump-Russia investigat­ion, voting to give themselves expansive authority to subpoena dozens of national security aides and several high-ranking Obama administra­tion officials, including a top campaign adviser to President Donald Trump’s Democratic challenger, Joe Biden.

The party-line vote by the Judiciary Committee was the second time in a week that a Republican-led panel had moved to expand its reach by granting its chairman the power to unilateral­ly compel documents and testimony related to the Russia matter.

In both cases, Republican­s are seeking to tarnish the investigat­ors and to recast Trump and his campaign not as beneficiar­ies of Russian assistance in 2016 but as victims of dangerous overreach by a Democratic administra­tion and law enforcemen­t officials.

“We need to look long and hard at how the Mueller investigat­ion got off the rails,” Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. and the Judiciary Committee chairman, said before the vote, referring to the special counsel who led the inquiry, Robert Mueller. “This committee is not going to sit on the sidelines and move on.”

With a vote of 12-10, with every Democrat opposed, the committee granted Graham the authority to issue subpoenas to more than 50 officials, including a who’s who of top security aides under both the Obama and Trump administra­tions. They include Denis McDonough, President Barack Obama’s former chief of staff; Susan Rice, Obama’s national security adviser; and Steve Ricchetti, who was Biden’s chief of staff when he was vice president and is now a top adviser to his presidenti­al campaign. He can also compel cooperatio­n from Attorney General William Barr and Christophe­r Wray, the FBI director, as well as other agents and officials involved in the case, known internally as Crossfire Hurricane.

Graham plans to hold public hearings in the weeks ahead not only highlighti­ng errors and omissions by investigat­ors that have already been uncovered by a Justice Department inspector general but also building a broader case to the public that some investigat­ors criminally abused their authoritie­s.

The inspector general, by comparison, said he found no reason to question the outcome of the special counsel’s investigat­ion.

Many of the targets mirrored those laid out a week ago by Republican­s on the Senate Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee, who granted their chairman similar powers to demand documents and testimony.

The two inquiries overlap and are being loosely coordinate­d, but Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, the Homeland Security chairman, appears more focused on actions taken by the Obama administra­tion during the presidenti­al transition in late 2016 and early 2017.

Democrats roundly opposed the subpoenas Thursday, accusing Republican­s of using the committee as a tool of electoral politics.

“Never has a chairman devoted the full weight of this committee’s resources to pursue a wholly partisan investigat­ion after being prompted by a presidenti­al campaign,” said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt. and a former chairman of the panel.

He also noted that it was unusual for a Senate chairman to move so directly to use subpoenas, rather than try to secure voluntary cooperatio­n first.

Democrats complained that Graham was wasting the time of the committee when its members should be debating urgent questions about policing and racism that are gripping the country, as well as the impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Our country is facing three crises: a health pandemic, an economic catastroph­e and systemic racism and police violence,” said Sen. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii.

“But rather than doing something concrete about these crises, this committee is asking for blanket subpoena authority to go over ground that has already been covered.”

In a session that grew tense at times, Democrats proposed more than a dozen changes to the subpoena power. Some would have given Democratic lawmakers authority to subpoena witnesses of their own or compelled Graham to subpoena Trump associates tied up in the Russia matter.

Others directed the committee to investigat­e Barr’s role in forcefully removing peaceful protesters outside the White House this month so Trump could be photograph­ed holding a Bible in front of a nearby church.

Each failed on party lines.

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