The Guardian (USA)

Jim Jordan demands material on him before complying with January 6 subpoena

- Hugo Lowell in Washington

Republican congressma­n Jim Jordan told the House select committee investigat­ing the Capitol attack that he would consider complying with the panel’s subpoena only if they shared the material that put him under scrutiny, according to a letter he sent on Wednesday.

The response by Jordan – the top Republican on the House judiciary committee who spoke to Donald Trump on January 6 – stopped short of a refusal to comply with his subpoena, though it was not clear how he would proceed if the panel refused his request.

In the six-page letter sent to the select committee and obtained by the Guardian, Jordan demanded House investigat­ors share with him all materials they intended to rely upon in questionin­g, materials in which he is referenced, and legal analyses about subpoenain­g members of Congress.

“Because your subpoena is an unpreceden­ted use of a committee’s compulsory authority against another member,” Jordan said in his letter, “I respectful­ly ask for the following material so that I may adequately further respond to your subpoena.”

The response puts the ball in the select committee’s court, forcing House investigat­ors to decide whether they will acquiesce to Jordan’s demands in the hope that it convinces him to give some testimony, or refuse and potentiall­y close off any chance of cooperatio­n.

But the letter, which challenged the legality of the select committee and its subpoenas, appeared to be something of a gambit for Jordan, too. For one thing, it was not clear whether Jordan wanted to face the consequenc­es for defying a subpoena if his demands were not met.

The response from Jordan – finalized on Tuesday and sent to the panel on Wednesday – also included complaints that House investigat­ors had not acted in good faith by issuing a subpoena around four months after Jordan apparently declined to give voluntary assistance.

“Your subpoena was unprompted and, in light of the unaddresse­d points from my January 9 letter, plainly unreasonab­le. I write to strongly contest the constituti­onality and validity of the

subpoena in several respects,” Jordan said.

The select committee’s subpoena to Jordan – which came alongside four other subpoenas to the House minority leader, Kevin McCarthy, Scott Perry,

Andy Biggs and Mo Brooks – demanded testimony about his December 2020 meetings with Trump in the White House and other communicat­ions.

House investigat­ors took the step to issue the unpreceden­ted subpoenas to five Republican members of Congress after Jordan, McCarthy and Perry did not appear for interviews on tentative dates suggested in initial letters seeking voluntary cooperatio­n.

 ?? Photograph: John Raoux/AP ?? Jim Jordan, the top Republican on the House judiciary committee, spoke to Donald Trump on January 6.
Photograph: John Raoux/AP Jim Jordan, the top Republican on the House judiciary committee, spoke to Donald Trump on January 6.

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