Albany Times Union

Trump withholds informatio­n

Democrats want to see communicat­ions between leaders

- By Mary Clare Jalonick and Zeke Miller

The White House on Thursday rejected a Democratic request for informatio­n on private conversati­ons between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, including an interview with an interprete­r who sat in on their one-on-one meeting in Helsinki last summer.

In a letter earlier this month, the House intelligen­ce, foreign affairs and oversight committees asked for the substance of Trump and Putin’s conversati­ons in person and by phone. They also asked for any documents related to the conversati­ons, informatio­n on whether the talks had any impact on U.S. foreign policy, and informatio­n on whether Trump tried to conceal any evidence of them.

On Thursday, White House counsel Pat Cipollone sent a letter to the Democratic chairmen of the three committees rebuffing all those requests.

“The president must be free to engage in discussion­s with foreign leaders without fear that those communicat­ions will be disclosed and used as fodder for partisan political purposes,” Cipollone wrote, adding, “No foreign leader would engage in private conversati­ons with the president, or the president’s senior advisors, if such conversati­ons were subject to public disclosure (or disclosure to committees of Congress).”

Citing Supreme Court precedent, Cipollone wrote that “the conduct of foreign affairs is a matter that the Constituti­on assigns exclusivel­y to the President.”

The three House chairmen responded Thursday with a statement saying Cipollone’s letter “continues a troubling pattern by the Trump Administra­tion of rejecting legitimate and necessary congressio­nal oversight with no regard for precedent or the constituti­on.”

The March 4 letters to the White House — signed by House Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Eliot Engel and House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairman Elijah Cummings — requested interviews with “linguists, translator­s or interprete­rs” who in any way listened to Trump and Putin’s conversati­ons. The two leaders met privately in Helsinki in July for more than two hours with only interprete­rs present, and the White House has not said what they discussed.

Multiple Democratic-led committees are battling with the White House over documents as they launch broad new investigat­ions of Trump and his personal and political dealings. On Tuesday, Cummings accused the White House of perpetrati­ng “an unpreceden­ted level of stonewalli­ng, delay and obstructio­n” in response to congressio­nal requests for documents and witnesses.

Cummings wrote in a Washington Post op-ed that he has sent 12 letters to the White House on a range of topics ranging from security clearances to the use of taxpayer funds for lavish private aircraft. Since then, he wrote, the Trump administra­tion has “not turned over a single piece of paper to our committee or made a single official available for testimony.”

 ?? Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press archive ?? President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin meet in 2018 at the Presidenti­al Palace in Helsinki, Finland. Special counsel Robert Mueller has yet to release his report about Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election, but Moscow has already rehearsed its response, dismissing the investigat­ion.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press archive President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin meet in 2018 at the Presidenti­al Palace in Helsinki, Finland. Special counsel Robert Mueller has yet to release his report about Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election, but Moscow has already rehearsed its response, dismissing the investigat­ion.

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