Daily Press

Barr won’t interfere with Mueller

- By Matt Zapotosky and Devlin Barrett The Washington Post

Says Trump hasn’t asked for any favoritism

— Attorney general nominee William Barr said in written testimony released Monday that he would let Special Counsel Robert Mueller finish his investigat­ion of Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign without political interferen­ce and that it was “very important” Congress and the public be informed of the results.

The four-page testimony, released a day ahead of Barr’s confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, offered a preview of how he will address what his advisers expect to be the most challengin­g lines of inquiry. Trump’s nominee to be the top U.S. law enforcemen­t official has occasional­ly been critical of the special counsel investigat­ion and wrote in a memo to Justice Department leaders last year that Mueller’s apparent theory of possible obstructio­n of justice by the president was “fatally misconceiv­ed.”

Because Republican­s have majority control in the Senate, Barr is likely to be confirmed even if Democrats are unpersuade­d by his assurances on Mueller and unanimousl­y oppose his nomination. Still, the hearing will allow for a public airing of two years of simmering tensions between the White House, the Justice Department and Congress over the future of the special counsel’s work and the broader independen­ce of federal law enforcemen­t.

Barr vowed to maintain the Justice Department’s independen­ce and said that Trump — who has been publicly critical of the FBI and Justice Department — “sought no assurances, promises, or commitment­s from me of any kind, either express or implied, and I have not given him any, other than that I would run the Department with profession­alism and integrity.”

Of the investigat­ion into whether Trump’s campaign coordinate­d with Russia to influence the 2016 election, Barr said it was “vitally important that the Special Counsel be allowed to comWASHING­TON plete his investigat­ion.” He said he had confidence that Mueller, who he considers a friend, will handle the matter properly.

“If confirmed, I will not permit partisan politics, personal interests, or any other improper considerat­ion to interfere with this or any other investigat­ion,” Barr said. “I will follow the Special Counsel regulation­s scrupulous­ly and in good faith, and on my watch, Bob will be allowed to complete his work.”

Barr said it would be his goal to “provide as much transparen­cy as I can consistent with the law” about the results of the investigat­ion, though he offered no specific commitment­s about what would become public or be turned over to Congress.

Though Barr, a former attorney general, deputy attorney general and head of the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, unquestion­ably has the experience to again lead the department, Democratic lawmakers have said they are troubled by what he has said previously about the special counsel and related Justice Department matters.

In 2017, for example, Barr said that he would have liked to have seen “more balance” on Mueller’s team — which includes many lawyers who have given political contributi­ons to Democrats — and he wrote that Trump’s decision to fire James Comey as FBI director was “quite understand­able.”

Barr, now a lawyer in private practice, wrote a lengthy memo to the Justice Department in June 2018 questionin­g Mueller’s ability to investigat­e whether the president had sought to obstruct justice an examinatio­n that includes Comey’s firing.

He proclaimed that Mueller “should not be permitted to demand that the President submit to interrogat­ion about alleged obstructio­n.”

That assertion could be particular­ly important, because if Barr was confirmed before Mueller’s work was done, he would likely have to approve a bid by the special counsel to force the president to answer questions in the case.

So far, Trump has answered only a limited set of Mueller’s inquiries in writing.

Both Republican­s and Democrats expect the memo will play a major role in Barr’s hearing, as Democrats press the nominee on why he sent it and who he talked with about it, and whether it means he should now recuse himself from the Mueller probe.

Barr said in his written testimony that his memo was “narrow in scope, explaining my thinking on a specific obstructio­n-of-justice theory under a single statute that I thought, based on media reports, the Special Counsel might be considerin­g.” He disputed the idea that it advanced a theory that the president could never obstruct justice.

Barr also will likely have to answer for meetings he participat­ed in around the time the memo was submitted on June 8.

On May 30, Barr gave a presentati­on to Justice Department political appointees, though he did not mention the document, according to people who attended.

Around that time, Barr also spoke to then-attorney general Jeff Sessions, according to several people familiar with the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive issue.

Sessions recused himself from the Russia probe, and it’s unclear if the two discussed the arguments Barr made in his memo.

 ?? AL DRAGO/BLOOMBERG ?? The confirmati­on hearing for Attorney General nominee William Barr before the Senate Judiciary Committee is Tuesday.
AL DRAGO/BLOOMBERG The confirmati­on hearing for Attorney General nominee William Barr before the Senate Judiciary Committee is Tuesday.

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