Partisan discord tainting probes of Russia, Trump, election
Partisan discord is seeping into House and Senate intelligence committee investigations of the Kremlin’s interference in the 2016 presidential election and whether President Donald Trump has ties to Russia.
Both Republicans and Democrats say they can still conduct bipartisan probes, but there are renewed calls for a special prosecutor and revelations that the White House enlisted GOP chairmen of the intelligence committees to push back against news reports suggesting Trump advisers were in contact with Russians.
The issue will likely surface at Tuesday’s Senate confirmation hearing for Dan Coats, a former senator from Indiana who is Trump’s pick to be the next national intelligence director.
Federal investigators have been looking into possible contacts between Trump advisers and Russia for months, along with Russia’s role in political
hacking during the campaign. Trump has denied knowing that any of his campaign advisers were in contact with Russians during the campaign. He has also said he has no financial ties or other connections to Russia.
Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina said he wasn’t taking questions about whether the
White House enlisted him to talk to reporters, as reported by The Washington Post.
“I’m in a comfortable place. I didn’t do anything to jeopardize my investigation,’’ Burr told The Associated Press on his way out of the Capitol after Senate votes Monday night.
Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, a Democrat on the intelligence committee, said if Burr did call reporters at the behest of the White House, it would be troubling. “If these reports are true, I think it’s going to be very hard to convince the public that there could be an impartial inquiry,’’ Wyden said.
On the House side, there was a simmering dispute Monday between the intelligence committee’s top Republican and Democrat.
The GOP chairman, Rep. Devin Nunes of California, said that so far, he has not received any evidence from the intelligence community that anyone in Trump’s orbit was in contact with Russians during the presidential campaign.
Nunes — a member of Trump’s presidential transition team — has said the White House asked him to talk with one reporter about the matter, but didn’t give him any guidance on what to say. He said he told that reporter the same thing he’s said to many other reporters in the course of discussions.