Houston Chronicle Sunday

Biden elaborates on his vow to ignore a Senate subpoena

- By Thomas Kaplan

IOWA CITY, Iowa — Joe Biden, expanding on his remarks a day earlier that he would not comply with a subpoena to testify in President Donald Trump’s impeachmen­t trial in the Senate, wrote on Twitter on Saturday that there would not be “any legal basis” for such a subpoena.

But speaking with reporters Saturday, Biden stopped short of vowing to fight a subpoena if one were ultimately issued.

“I would honor whatever the Congress in fact legitimate­ly asked me to do,” Biden said after a townhall-style event in Tipton, Iowa.

Asked if he would challenge a subpoena in court if he believed he had no facts to provide that would be relevant, he responded, “The answer is, I don’t think that’s going to happen to begin with. Let’s cross that bridge when it comes.” He added that he would abide by “whatever was legally required of me.”

The result was a sometimes confusing attempt to address a hypothetic­al situation that Biden criticized himself for drawing attention to in the first place.

Biden wrote on Twitter that over the course of his decadeslon­g political career, he had “always complied with a lawful order” and that in his two terms as vice president, his office had “cooperated with legitimate congressio­nal oversight requests.”

Biden’s further explanatio­n Saturday began with a series of tweets in the morning. He wrote that he wanted to “clarify” comments he had made Friday when he met with the editorial board of the Des Moines Register, whose endorsemen­t in the Iowa caucuses is highly sought after by presidenti­al candidates. Biden was asked by the Register whether he stood by previous comments that he would not comply with a subpoena to testify in the impeachmen­t trial. He said he did and explained that complying with a subpoena and testifying would effectivel­y allow Trump to shift attention onto Biden and away from the president’s own conduct.

“The reason I wouldn’t is because it’s all designed to deal with Trump doing what he’s done his whole life: trying to take the focus off him,” Biden told the newspaper. “The issue is not what I did.”

On Saturday, Biden elaborated on Twitter: “I am just not going to pretend that there is any legal basis for Republican subpoenas for my testimony in the impeachmen­t trial. That is the point I was making yesterday and I reiterate: this impeachmen­t is about Trump’s conduct, not mine.”

Speaking to reporters in Tipton, Biden said he had “no firsthand knowledge” about the accusation­s against Trump, so there would be no rationale for calling him as a witness.

The House impeached Trump this month over his campaign to pressure Ukraine to investigat­e Biden and his son Hunter Biden. In the aftermath of Trump’s impeachmen­t, the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and the minority leader, Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., have been at odds over proceeding­s for a trial, in part because of Schumer’s request to call Trump administra­tion officials for testimony at an impeachmen­t trial.

 ?? Joe Raedle / Getty Images ?? Joe Biden greets supporters on Saturday at a campaign stop at Tipton High School in Tipton, Iowa.
Joe Raedle / Getty Images Joe Biden greets supporters on Saturday at a campaign stop at Tipton High School in Tipton, Iowa.

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