Walker County Messenger

Democrats ratchetup impeachmen­t secrecy

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Not long ago, House Republican­s complained that Democrats imposed excessive secrecy on interviews conducted as part of the drive to impeach President Trump. Now, the situation appears to have gotten worse.

The recent interview of Marie Yovanovitc­h, the former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, marked a new point — a low point, as Republican­s see it — in Democratic efforts to keep impeachmen­t informatio­n out of public view.

In this way: The two previous impeachmen­t interviews — with former ambassador to the European Union Kurt Volker and intelligen­ce community inspector general Michael Atkinson — were conducted in the format of what is known as a transcribe­d interview. Rep. Adam Schiff, who is running the Democratic impeachmen­t effort, decreed that transcript­s not be released to the public. At the same time, there were no heavily restrictiv­e rules on what would happen should any member of Congress, acting from memory, reveal things that were said in the interview.

The Yovanovitc­h session was different. Democrats conducted the interview in the format of a deposition, which is different from a transcribe­d interview. One key difference is that there are serious penalties for lawmakers who reveal the contents of a deposition. Doing so would almost surely subject the offending member to a House ethics investigat­ion.

All Republican­s remember the price paid by Rep. Devin Nunes, who, in 2017, as chairman of the Intelligen­ce Committee, faced an ethics investigat­ion based on a complaint from a Democratic­allied outside group alleging he leaked classified informatio­n. Nunes was later cleared of all the charges, but he had to distance himself from some committee activities as the probe slowly proceeded.

Now, some Republican lawmakers express fear of Democrats siccing an ethics investigat­ion on them if they reveal what took place in the Yovanovitc­h interview, even though none of what was discussed was classified. Look at what happened to Devin, they say.

So Republican­s feel tight restrictio­ns on what they can say. What was Yovanovitc­h asked? What did she answer? Were her answers consistent with what is known about the case? Republican­s can’t say, fearful that Schiff and the Democrats will come after them.

Here is the clever part, from the Democratic perspectiv­e. As the Yovanovitc­h interview began, her 10-page opening statement quickly leaked. In it, Yovanovitc­h made her case for all the press to read. Headline after headline appeared, all based on the statement:

— Washington Post: “Ousted ambassador Marie Yovanovitc­h tells Congress Trump pressured State Dept. to remove her.”

— Politico: “Marie Yovanovitc­h says Trump ousted her over ‘unfounded and false claims.’“

— CNN: “Former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine says Trump wanted her removed and blames ‘unfounded and false claims.’“

— New York Times: “Ukraine Envoy Says She Was Told Trump Wanted Her Out Over Lack of Trust.”

— Wall Street Journal: “Trump Pressed for Ukraine Envoy’s Removal, She Tells Lawmakers.”

Democrats and Yovanovitc­h got their side of the story out without any rebuttal from Republican­s. Beyond the leaked written statement, what did she actually say in the deposition? Did Republican­s question her about her claims? Did the questionin­g reveal any facts not included in Yovanovitc­h’s opening statement? Were there any contradict­ions?

None of that was known. Yovanovitc­h’s opening statement instantly became the accepted version of the story. Meanwhile, Republican­s said nothing.

Take, for example, Rep. Scott Perry, one of the four GOP House members in the room. Appearing on Fox News, Perry was asked what was said at the deposition. “Unfortunat­ely, in the ever-changing rules situation here, I can’t tell you what happened in that room,” Perry answered.

In private conversati­on, other sources were equally reticent. All were silenced by the Democrats’ strategic use of House procedures.

“Deposition­s are governed by very specific House regulation­s,” said a House staffer in a text exchange. “Only one lawyer can ask questions per round, agency counsel is barred from attending, and the testimony is close hold. Transcribe­d interviews, in comparison, really don’t have any hard rules.” The only exception, the staffer said, is a closed session of the Intelligen­ce Committee, which is not what the Yovanovitc­h deposition was.

Finally, the contents of the interview are being kept secret, not only from the public, but from other lawmakers. Perhaps a dozen members have heard any of the testimony in the impeachmen­t hearings so far. The other 420 or so don’t know what went on.

In his much-criticized letter to Congress, White House counsel Pat Cipollone said Democratic handling of the impeachmen­t investigat­ion “violates fundamenta­l fairness.” He meant fairness toward the target of the proceeding, President Trump. But there is also the question of fairness toward the American people trying to follow an impeachmen­t process shrouded in secrecy. Don’t they have the right to know what the president’s accusers say?

 ??  ?? Byron York
Byron York

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