The Mercury News Weekend

Dems want to interview Ivanka Trump

- RUSSIA PROBE By Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON » The top Democrat on the House intelligen­ce committee says he wants to interview the president’s daughter as part of the panel’s Russia investigat­ion, along with other witnesses who Republican­s aren’t inviting.

Rep. Adam Schiff said Thursday that Republican­s have declined to invite many witnesses that would be valuable to the probe, including Ivanka Trump and several people who he says have additional informatio­n about a June 2016 meeting between Russians and the Trump campaign.

“There are witnesses who have knowledge of the Trump Tower meeting and what it was about prior to the meeting that have not been brought before our committee,” Schiff said.

At the Trump Tower meeting, several Trump campaign officials met with Russian operatives under the impression that they might receive damaging informatio­n about the Democratic presidenti­al candidate, Hillary Clinton. The meeting has captured the interest of congressio­nal investigat­ors and special counsel Robert Mueller.

The Los Angeles Times reported last week that Ivanka Trump talked to at least two of the meeting’s participan­ts on the way out.

“I think that if there’s credible informatio­n that Ivanka Trump had contact with any participan­ts in that meeting, at the time of the meeting, that she should be brought in,” Schiff said. “She may have more valuable insights on a variety of other issues as well.”

Schiff said the committee has interviewe­d a total of 56 witnesses, less than half of the number of witnesses the Senate intelligen­ce committee has interviewe­d in its own investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce and whether the Trump campaign was involved. House interviews are done by lawmakers and often run for hours. The Senate panel’s interviews are done by staff.

He laid the blame on House intelligen­ce committee chairman Devin Nunes, R- Calif, who stepped aside from the probe for several months while the House Ethics Committee investigat­ed whether Nunes had at one point divulged classified informatio­n.

Schiff said he and Texas Rep. Mike Conaway, who has led the probe since Nunes stepped aside, have “tried to keep the investigat­ion on track,” but “the chairman has a different agenda.”

Nunes has been focused on a dossier of allegation­s about Trump’s ties to Russia and whether it has been inappropri­ately used by the FBI. Democrats have said that’s just an attempt to divert from the Russia probe.

Republican­s have criticized Democrats for trying to draw out the probe and say there’s no clear evidence of collusion between Trump and Russia.

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