Houston Chronicle Sunday

Democrats to interview ex-watchdog

- By Mary Clare Jalonick and Matthew Lee

WASHINGTON — House and Senate Democrats will interview former State Department Inspector General Steve Linick on Wednesday as part of their investigat­ion into his abrupt firing by President Donald Trump.

Linick will speak to Democrats on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, the House Oversight and Reform Committee and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, according to two congressio­nal aides working on the investigat­ion. The aides requested anonymity to discuss the closed-door meeting.

Democrats announced Friday that they are expanding their probe into Linick’s firing earlier this month with a series of interviews. The investigat­ion is part of a larger effort by Democrats and some Republican­s to find out more about Trump’s recent moves to sideline several independen­t government watchdogs.

The Democrats plan to interview multiple officials in the administra­tion who may have more informatio­n about Linick’s dismissal on May 15, including whether Secretary of State Mike Pompeo recommende­d the firing for retaliator­y reasons. Pompeo has denied Linick’s firing was retaliator­y but has not given specific reasons for his dismissal.

The investigat­ion is being led by House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., House Oversight and Reform Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., and New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. They said they will release transcript­s shortly after each interview.

“If Secretary Pompeo pushed for Mr. Linick’s dismissal to cover up his own misconduct, that would constitute an egregious abuse of power and a clear attempt to avoid accountabi­lity,” the Democrats said in a joint statement Friday.

White House response

The committee has asked several other State Department officials to sit for interviews in the probe, including Undersecre­tary of State for Management Brian Bulatao, Assistant Secretary for Political-Military Affairs Clarke Cooper, Pompeo’s executive secretary Lisa Kenna and acting State Department legal adviser Marik String, according to the congressio­nal aides.

Democrats and some Republican­s have pushed the administra­tion for more answers about the firings, but the White House has provided few, simply stating the dismissals were well within Trump’s authority.

Pompeo said after the firing that he had been concerned about the inspector general’s work for some time and that he regretted not calling for his dismissal earlier. He said he recommende­d to Trump that Linick be terminated.

Pompeo told reporters that he was unaware of any investigat­ion into allegation­s that he may have mistreated staffers by instructin­g them to run personal errands for him and his wife such as walking his dog and picking up dry cleaning and takeout food. Thus, Pompeo said, the move could not have been retaliator­y.

Pompeo did acknowledg­e that he was aware of an investigat­ion into his decision last year to bypass congressio­nal objections to approve a multibilli­on-dollar arms sale to Saudi Arabia because he had answered written questions about it posed by Linick’s office. He maintained he did not know the scope or scale of the investigat­ion.

Impeachmen­t link

Linick is one of several inspectors general whom Trump has removed from office, sparking outrage among Democrats who say the administra­tion is underminin­g government accountabi­lity. Linick was an Obama administra­tion appointee whose office was critical of what it saw as political bias in the State Department’s current management but had also taken issue with Democratic appointees.

He played a small role in Trump’s impeachmen­t last year. In October, Linick turned over documents to House investigat­ors that he had received from a close Pompeo associate that contained informatio­n from debunked conspiracy theories about Ukraine’s role in the 2016 U.S. election. Democrats were probing Trump’s pressure on Ukraine to investigat­e Democrats.

Linick is the second inspector general to be fired who was involved with the impeachmen­t process. Michael Atkinson, the former inspector general for the intelligen­ce community, triggered the impeachmen­t probe when he alerted Congress about a whistleblo­wer complaint that described a call between Trump and Ukraine’s president last summer. Trump fired Atkinson in April, saying he had lost confidence in him.

Engel and Menendez earlier demanded that administra­tion officials preserve and turn over all records related to Linick’s dismissal. They said they have received no informatio­n so far.

Sen. Chuck Grassley, RIowa, has said the White House is legally required to provide more answers to Congress about the firings and gave Trump a deadline to give them. But in a letter to Grassley this week, the administra­tion offered no new details about why they were let go.

The response from White House counsel Pat Cipollone said that Trump has the authority to remove inspectors general, that he appropriat­ely alerted Congress and that he selected qualified officials as replacemen­ts.

 ?? New York Times file photo ?? Steve Linick, former inspector general for the State Department, was fired by President Donald Trump on May 15.
New York Times file photo Steve Linick, former inspector general for the State Department, was fired by President Donald Trump on May 15.

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