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House GOP pushing to end Russia probe despite protests

- By Billy House Bloomberg News

House Republican­s are talking about wrapping up their investigat­ion into Russia’s campaign meddling despite protests from Democrats that three highprofil­e witnesses close to President Donald Trump are stiff-arming efforts to question them.

Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowsk­i and departing White House communicat­ions director Hope Hicks have each declined in separate interviews with the House intelligen­ce committee to talk about certain matters, in some cases saying the president may want to assert executive privilege over their discussion­s later.

“If you were going to design this investigat­ion for failure, that’s what they’d be doing,” Democrat Mike Quigley said, referring to GOP talk of closing the probe. “It’s like the president is coordinati­ng with them in this effort.”

The most recent witness to balk at some questions was Hicks, who spent almost nine hours before the House intelligen­ce panel Tuesday.

On Wednesday, she announced she is stepping down. She has told friends that she has been mulling her future for months.

As Bannon did last month, Hicks told the House panel that she had instructio­ns from the White House to not answer questions on some topics concerning the transition before Trump took office or anything from her tenure in the administra­tion.

Lewandowsk­i is refusing to discuss any matters after his departure from the Trump campaign in June 2016, including conversati­ons with the president.

Committee Democrats say members must force these witnesses to testify more fully if the panel’s investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 campaign and potential collusion with anyone close to Trump is to be thorough and seen as credible.

They say Republican­s aren’t energetica­lly challengin­g questionab­le claims of privilege from the former aides and aren’t helping to secure production of other informatio­n, including banking and travel documents.

“The integrity and independen­ce of the committee and Congress’ investigat­ive and enforcemen­t powers are at stake,” said Adam Schiff, D-Calif., the top Democrat on the panel.

Neither committee Chairman Devin Nunes, RCalif., nor the GOP colleague he picked to lead the panel’s Russia investigat­ion, Michael Conaway, returned messages asking for comment.

But other intelligen­ce panel Republican­s acknowledg­e that even they haven’t been brought into any committee meetings on pursuing contempt of Congress charges or other action to compel more witness cooperatio­n.

Quigley said that if the Republican­s do move soon to shut down the probe, Democrats will counter the majority’s committee report on the investigat­ion’s findings with one of their own that would point out informatio­n that should have been sought and obtained, but wasn’t.

During her testimony, Hicks refused to say whether she had lied for a number of senior White House and Trump campaign officials, even as she acknowledg­ed telling “white lies” for Trump.

According to a Democrat and a Republican on the panel, Hicks refused to answer questions about whether she had been asked to lie by White House aides and Trump’s family members, including Jared Kushner, Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump Jr., Bannon, Lewandowsk­i and Paul Manafort.

The one exception she made, according to Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., was acknowledg­ing that former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn had asked her during the transition period to dissemble about questions he was getting regarding his conversati­ons with the Russian ambassador, Sergey Kislyak.

Swalwell said Hicks did not answer when he asked why she would refuse to say whether other aides had asked her to lie when she was willing to speak about Flynn, or whether she had ever witnessed Trump asking others to lie for him.

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 ?? AP 2016 ?? Steve Bannon, top, Hope Hicks and Corey Lewandowsk­i have declined to talk about certain matters with the House committee.
AP 2016 Steve Bannon, top, Hope Hicks and Corey Lewandowsk­i have declined to talk about certain matters with the House committee.
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