The Guardian (USA)

Merrick Garland faces down Republican attacks over Hunter Biden inquiry

- Chris Stein and Guardian staff

Merrick Garland faced down the latest Republican attacks on the justice department’s handling of Hunter Biden and other issues on Wednesday, vowing to “not be intimidate­d”.

The House judiciary inquiry came just a week before the Joe Biden impeachmen­t hearing, which will also focus on the scope of Hunter Biden’s legal troubles and alleged corruption. Both are part of the Republican party’s ongoing attempt to erode trust in federal institutio­ns such as the Department of Justice and its FBI arm, claiming they are partisan actors.

“Our job is to pursue justice, without fear or favor. Our job is not to do what is politicall­y convenient,” Garland said in his opening statement. “Our job is not to take orders from the president, from Congress or from anyone else about who or what to criminally investigat­e. As the president himself has said, and I reaffirmed today, I am not the president’s lawyer. I will add I am not Congress’s prosecutor.”

The committee’s chairman, Jim Jordan, a Republican from Ohio, launched into those queries in his opening statement, criticizin­g the attorney general’s decision to appoint David Weiss as a special counsel to handle the investigat­ion into the president’s son. Weiss is the federal prosecutor in Delaware who was appointed by Donald Trump and kept in his job even after Joe Biden took the White House and swapped out most other US attorneys nationwide.

Despite that, Jordan thinks Weiss is underminin­g the investigat­ion into Hunter Biden, which has centered on claims he failed to pay income taxes and lied about using drugs while buying a gun. Biden was indicted on the latter charge last week.

“He could have selected anyone,” Jordan said of Garland. “He could have picked anyone inside government, outside government. He could have picked former attorney generals, former special counsels, but he picks the one guy … he knows will protect Joe Biden. He picks David Weiss.”

Matt Gaetz, a Republican from Florida, took a more colorful approach, criticizin­g Biden’s public loyalty to his son.

“Has anyone at the department told President Biden to knock it off with Hunter? I mean, you guys are charging Hunter Biden on some crimes, investigat­ing him on others, you’ve got the president bringing Hunter Biden around to state dinners. Has anyone told him to knock it off ?” Gaetz asked.

The judiciary committee’s highestran­king Democrat, Jerry Nadler of New York, also asked Garland what would happen if the FBI was defunded, which has become a surprising rallying cry for extreme rightwing Republican­s such as representa­tives Marjorie Taylor Greene and Matt Gaetz, as well as the presidenti­al candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, who claim the law enforcemen­t agency has become politicize­d.

Defunding the FBI “would leave the United States naked to the malign influence of the Chinese Communist party, to the attacks by Iranians on American citizens and attempts to assassinat­e former officials, to the Russian aggression, to North Korean cyber-attacks, to violent crime in the United States, which the FBI helps to fight against, to all kinds of espionage, to domestic violent extremists who have attacked our churches, our synagogues or mosques and who have killed individual­s out of

racial hatred,” Garland said.

“I just, I cannot imagine the consequenc­es of defunding the FBI, but they would be catastroph­ic.”

Amid the back and forth, the White House put out a statement, calling the hearing a “circus” that wasted Garland’s time promoting conspiracy theories rather than dealing with more pressing business, like funding the government ahead of a shutdown on 30 September.

“Extreme House Republican­s are running a not-so-sophistica­ted distractio­n campaign to try to cover up their own actions that are hurtling America to a dangerous and costly government shutdown,” the White House spokespers­on for oversight and investigat­ions, Ian Sams, said of the hearing, which the judiciary committee regularly holds with the attorney general.

“They cannot even pass a military funding bill because extreme House Republican­s are demanding devastatin­g cuts like slashing thousands of preschool slots nationwide and thousands of law enforcemen­t jobs including border agents, so they cranked up a circus of a hearing full of lies and disinforma­tion with the sole goal of baselessly attacking President Biden and his family,” Sams said.

 ?? Photograph: Gripas Yuri/Abaca/Shuttersto­ck ?? Merrick Garland: ‘Our job is to pursue justice, without fear or favor. Our job is not to do what is politicall­y convenient.’
Photograph: Gripas Yuri/Abaca/Shuttersto­ck Merrick Garland: ‘Our job is to pursue justice, without fear or favor. Our job is not to do what is politicall­y convenient.’

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