Texarkana Gazette

Ryan opposes Rosenstein impeachmen­t try

-

WASHINGTON—House Speaker Paul Ryan spoke out against an effort by a small group of Republican­s to impeach Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein on Thursday, dooming the endeavor for now and easing a months-long standoff between House Republican­s and the Justice Department.

Ryan said the tussle over document requests between House Republican­s and Rosenstein, who oversees the federal TrumpRussi­a investigat­ion, doesn’t rise to the level of “high crimes and misdemeano­rs” that could warrant impeachmen­t under the Constituti­on.

“I don’t think we should be cavalier with this process or with this term,” Ryan said. He also said he is encouraged by progress on the document production.

Ryan made the comments a day after the group of 11 House Republican­s sharply escalated the extended clash with the Justice Department by filing articles of impeachmen­t against Rosenstein, who oversees special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion.

Their move late Wednesday came after months of criticism aimed at the department—and the Russia investigat­ion in particular— President Donald Trump and his Republican allies in Congress.

Mueller is investigat­ing Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election and whether Trump’s campaign was involved.

The impeachmen­t effort was led by North Carolina Rep. Mark Meadows, the chairman of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus who talks to Trump frequently and often defends him to colleagues.

As Ryan voiced his disapprova­l, Meadows acknowledg­ed that he didn’t currently have the votes to pass the impeachmen­t resolution and said he wouldn’t use procedural maneuvers to trigger an immediate vote—something he had threatened to do. The House left Thursday afternoon for a five-week recess.

Instead, Meadows said he had a commitment from leaders to vote on holding Rosenstein in contempt of Congress when the House returns in September if certain documents are still outstandin­g. The agreement came after discussion­s on the House floor with Judiciary Committee Chairman Robert Goodlatte, R-Va., and the No. 3 House GOP leader, Rep. Steve Scalise of Louisiana.

The contempt resolution would first have to move through the Judiciary Committee, according to Republican aides.

Meadows said the five-week delay would give the department “one last chance” to deliver. He didn’t rule out trying for an impeachmen­t vote in the future.

“Now it’s in Rod Rosenstein’s court,” Meadows said. Ryan’s tone was far different. “We do not have full compliance, and we have to get full compliance, but we have been making tremendous progress to that point,” he said of multiple document requests.

Meanwhile, Attorney General Jeff Sessions defended Rosenstein in a Boston speech, saying he has the “highest confidence” in his top deputy. Rosenstein has overseen the Russia investigat­ion since last year, when Sessions recused himself following reports of his own meeting with the Russian ambassador.

The White House was ambivalent about whether Trump supported the effort to impeach Rosenstein. “The president has been clear that he wants the DOJ to be transparen­t and cooperate with Congress,” spokesman Hogan Gidley told reporters.

Meadows, Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan and the other Republican­s who introduced the resolution have criticized Rosenstein and Justice Department officials as not being responsive enough as House committees have demanded documents related to the Russia investigat­ion’s inception and a now-closed investigat­ion into Democrat Hillary Clinton’s emails.

The five articles of impeachmen­t would charge Rosenstein with failing to produce informatio­n, though the department has provided lawmakers with more than 800,000 documents. The resolution notes that Rosenstein was one of several department officials who approved what some Republican­s say was improper surveillan­ce of Trump campaign adviser Carter Page.

The impeachmen­t resolution also criticizes Rosenstein for refusing to produce a memo that outlines the scope of the investigat­ion and questions whether the investigat­ion was started on legitimate grounds.

It is highly unusual, if not unpreceden­ted, for lawmakers to demand documents that are part of an ongoing criminal investigat­ion.

At a House hearing last month, Rosenstein, along with FBI Director Christophe­r Wray, faced angry Republican­s who alleged bias at the FBI and suggested the department has conspired against Trump. Still, some GOP lawmakers said they would draw the line at impeachmen­t.

“Impeachmen­t is a punishment; it’s not a remedy,” said House Oversight and Government Reform Chairman Trey Gowdy, who has led one of several House GOP investigat­ions into the department and has complained of anti-Trump bias. “If you are looking for documents, then you want compliance, and you want whatever moves you toward compliance.”

The impeachmen­t resolution came about two hours after Meadows, Gowdy, Goodlatte and other GOP lawmakers met with Justice Department officials about the documents. The department has created new search systems, set up classified reading rooms and tasked dozens of employees to produce the hundreds of thousands of documents that Republican lawmakers have requested over the past year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States