Los Angeles Times

Lawmaker scrutinize­d over his ties to Russia

GOP leaders monitor his subcommitt­ee, which examines U.S. policy in Moscow.

- By Sarah D. Wire sarah.wire@latimes.com Twitter: @sarahdwire

WASHINGTON — The congressio­nal subcommitt­ee led by California Republican Rep. Dana Rohrabache­r is being heavily monitored by GOP leaders because of allegation­s that the Orange County congressma­n has been overly influenced by his connection­s to Russia.

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce will be “more involved in guiding the direction” of the subcommitt­ee that is in part responsibl­e for examining U.S. policy in Russia, said a senior congressio­nal aide who asked not to be identified in order to discuss internal committee matters.

The heightened focus, which affects where subcommitt­ee members can travel and on what topics Rohrabache­r can hold hearings, was first reported by the Daily Beast.

Rohrabache­r has long said that the United States needs a better relationsh­ip with Russia, puzzling colleagues who have speculated privately about why he’s willing to work with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Connection­s between Rohrabache­r and Russian officials have been newly highlighte­d as Congress investigat­es Russian attempts to interfere in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election.

Royce’s increased attention on Rohrabache­r’s subcommitt­ee began in late July, when Royce fired Rohrabache­r’s committee staffer and longtime friend Paul Behrends after a Politico article described Behrends as a “Hill staffer at the center of the Russia intrigue.”

According to multiple reports, Behrends helped organize a meeting last year during a committee trip to Russia in which high-level Russian officials gave Rohrabache­r informatio­n to try to derail some U.S. sanctions against the country. Rohrabache­r briefly considered holding a hearing to air the informatio­n. Some of the people who helped organize the meeting also met with President Trump’s son and campaign officials during the 2016 campaign.

Rohrabache­r on Wednesday downplayed the increased oversight as a disagreeme­nt.

“It’s a disagreeme­nt on how to approach this whole issue of Russia — that’s it. I want to have both sides presented on every hearing and Ed does not believe in that. Ed believes in pushing the totally anti-Russian line and I believe that we should look at both sides,” he said.

A Royce spokespers­on declined to comment. Royce, of Fullerton, and Rohrabache­r, of Costa Mesa, both represent Orange County congressio­nal districts that are being targeted by Democrats in the 2018 midterm election.

Rohrabache­r also blamed the new restrictio­ns on the news media, which he said has mischaract­erized his meetings with Russian officials.

“The media is not doing their job and they’re lying to the public about this being an issue about Russia when, in fact, my meetings with Russians have everything to do with my responsibi­lities being chairman of that committee,” Rohrabache­r said. “It’s not sinister. It’s my job.”

While the Foreign Affairs Committee regularly reviews requests for all subcommitt­ee hearings and official travel, the senior congressio­nal aide said, there is special interest in examining Rohrabache­r’s requests.

“Some of his suggestion­s for hearings were turned down,” Rohrabache­r spokesman Ken Grubbs said in an email to the Los Angeles Times.

Rohrabache­r asked Royce in September if he could investigat­e the Obama administra­tion’s 2010 decision to approve the sale of uranium mines to a Russian-backed company, and its tenuous connection­s to former Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton. The senior congressio­nal aide said Royce urged Rohrabache­r to talk to the Justice Department instead. Two House committees are now investigat­ing.

Royce’s frustratio­n with Rohrabache­r apparently spiked after Rohrabache­r traveled to London in August to meet with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who is living in asylum at the Ecuadorean embassy.

Rohrabache­r said the Australian fugitive “emphatical­ly stated that the Russians were not involved” in the theft of Democratic National Committee emails during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign even though numerous federal agencies have blamed Russia for the theft. Rohrabache­r is trying to arrange a meeting with Trump to discuss a pardon for Assange in exchange for informatio­n about who stole the emails, but says he has been waylaid by White House Chief of Staff John Kelly. Rohrabache­r lingered for hours Tuesday in a Capitol hallway outside where the president attended a GOP Senate lunch. Trump left through a different door.

The trip to London to meet with Assange was not sanctioned by the committee, the aide said, and Royce was not aware of the trip or that Rohrabache­r was meeting with Assange. Grubbs said Rohrabache­r, who paid for the trip himself, never asked the committee to pay for it.

The senior House congressio­nal aide said there has not been talk about removing Rohrabache­r as chair of the subcommitt­ee.

Rohrabache­r said the committee will focus on other topics in its jurisdicti­on, such as what the election of a far-right party in Austria means for the United States.

The ranking Democrat on the subcommitt­ee, Rep. Gregory Meeks of New York, said the attention from Royce is affecting the subcommitt­ee’s ability to operate “to a degree.”

The committee used to meet once a month, but its schedule shows it hasn’t met since the end of July, when members discussed how Trump’s budget would affect foreign relations. There is a mid-November hearing scheduled on the United Kingdom leaving the European Union, Meeks said.

 ?? Bill Clark CQ-Roll Call,Inc. ?? REP. DANA Rohrabache­r (R-Costa Mesa) has long called for better U.S. relations with Russia. Allegation­s that he’s been overly inf luenced by his ties to Moscow have drawn attention to his subcommitt­ee leadership.
Bill Clark CQ-Roll Call,Inc. REP. DANA Rohrabache­r (R-Costa Mesa) has long called for better U.S. relations with Russia. Allegation­s that he’s been overly inf luenced by his ties to Moscow have drawn attention to his subcommitt­ee leadership.

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