The Union Democrat

Graham plans to invite Mueller to testify on Russian probe

- By RYAN BEENE

Sen. Lindsey Graham is preparing to invite former Special Counsel Robert Mueller to testify before a Senate panel about the probe of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election, according to a spokespers­on for the panel's Republican majority.

Graham of South Carolina, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, tweeted earlier that he would grant a prior request by Democrats on the panel — made in 2019 — for Mueller to appear.

He's been hinting at such a move for some time as a way to grill Mueller about the origins of the Russian probe and what many Republican­s see as bias against President Donald Trump by the nation's law enforcemen­t agencies.

Two days earlier Graham described the Mueller investigat­ion as having been "biased and corrupt."

Graham finally acted after the publicatio­n on Saturday of an opinion piece in the Washington Post, in which Mueller defended his efforts against "broad claims that our investigat­ion was illegitima­te and our motives were improper."

Mueller wrote that former campaign operative Roger Stone, whose sentence was commuted by Trump on Friday, "remains a convicted felon, and rightly so."

The comments were a rarity since Mueller was tapped to oversee the Russia probe in 2017, and departed as special counsel in 2019 once the investigat­ion was complete.

"Apparently Mr. Mueller is willing — and also capable — of defending the Mueller investigat­ion," Graham said in his tweet on Sunday.

On Friday Graham, who's up for re-election this year, tweeted that Trump was justified in commuting Stone's 40-month prison sentence, adding that "over time we learn how biased and corrupt Crossfire Hurricane and the Mueller probes were."

Crossfire Hurricane was the code name for the counterint­elligence investigat­ion undertaken by the FBI in 2016 and 2017 into possible links between Russia and Trump associates.

Democrats on the Senate Judiciary panel wrote to Graham in May 2019 asking for Mueller to testify on his report, saying there were "at least 60 unanswered questions" they hoped the former FBI director could address.

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