The Manila Times

House finds ‘no evidence’ of Trump-Russia collusion

- AFP

WASHINGTON, D.C.: The House Intelligen­ce Committee’s investigat­ion into alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 election has found no evidence of collusion by Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign, Republican­s leading the panel announced on Monday (Tuesday in Manila).

Declaring their year-long probe essentiall­y over, they conceded that Moscow did interfere in the election, but rejected the conclusion of US intelligen­ce agencies that it had aimed to help Donald Trump win the election. And they blamed Barack Obama’s government for not stopping the meddling, which Trump has been reluctant to acknowledg­e ever took place.

“We have found no evidence of collusion, coordinati­on or conspiracy between the Trump campaign and the Russians,” the committee’s majority Republican­s said in a summary report on their investigat­ion.

They said they concurred with the judgment of US spy chiefs from January 2017 on the Russian interferen­ce, except with respect to President Vladimir Putin’s alleged preference for candidate Trump.

“After more than a year, the investigat­ion and will now work on completing our report,” said panel chair Devin Nunes.

- ommendatio­ns will be useful for improving security and integrity for the 2018 midterm elections.”

Democrats cite White House pressure

The announceme­nt outraged Democrats on the committee, who had witnesses and pursue more of the well-establishe­d links that Trump and his advisors have to Russia.

Adam Schiff, the senior Democrat on the panel, said the move stemmed from pressure from the White House, where Trump and close advisors face a separate collusion investigat­ion by the Justice Department’s independen­t prosecutor Robert Mueller.

He called the investigat­ion under Nunes “fundamenta­lly unserious.”

“We have learned a great deal about countless secret meetings, conversati­ons and communicat­ions between Trump campaign which the Trump Administra­tion initially denied,” he said.

“If the Russians do have leverage over the president of the United States, the majority has simply decided it would rather not know.”

Trump though declared in an all upper-case tweet that the committee “found no evidence of collusion or coordinati­on” between his presidenti­al campaign and Russia, a claim he has made made in late 2016.

And House Speaker Paul Ryan, who has supported Nunes despite questions about his leadership of the intelligen­ce committee, likewise declared the issue resolved and said the focus has to be on preventing Russian meddling in November’s US congressio­nal elections.

“That’s what this next phase is about and we hope Democrats will join us in seeing this through,” said Ryan spokeswoma­n AshLee Strong.

The intelligen­ce committee has been deeply riven from the beginning.

Nunes, a close supporter of the president, sought with some success to turn it into an investigat­ion of the Obama administra­tion and the FBI, which he and Trump accused of illegally spying on the Republican’s campaign.

The report summary made no mention of the alleged theft and leaks by Russians of embarrassi­ng documents and communicat­ions from the campaign of Trump rival Hillary Clinton in mid-2016, have stated as a fact.

- tion on its head by claiming that anti- Trump research “made its way from Russian sources to the Clinton campaign.”

And it criticized the Obama administra­tion for “a lackluster pre-election response to Russian active measures.”

The end of the House committee’s Russia probe does not leave Trump in the clear, however. For one, the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee is still investigat­ing alleged collusion, and the two parties are cooperatin­g more closely there.

More importantl­y, Mueller’s investigat­ion is advancing steadily and ominously. He has already indicted several former top Trump aides, as he develops evidence of extensive contacts between the campaign and Russia.

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