Los Angeles Times

Republican­s cry foul

They storm impeachmen­t hearing, alleging lack of access. But GOP members are always present.

- By Jennifer Haberkorn and Sarah D. Wire

WASHINGTON — About two dozen Republican members of Congress stormed a secure hearing room in the U.S. Capitol basement Wednesday, complainin­g that the Democratic-led impeachmen­t inquiry was secretive and partisan. “We don’t even know what’s going on,” said Rep. Debbie Lesko (R-Ariz.).

Objections to the fairness of the process have become a central part of the Republican case against the impeachmen­t investigat­ion. The reality inside the closed-door hearing, however, is more complex: Republican­s have participat­ed in each deposition, though their role is constraine­d by the Democratic majority.

At each hearing, at least a dozen lawmakers — often more — sit along a rectangula­r table, Republican­s on the right, Democrats on the left, said Rep. Harley Rouda (D-Laguna Beach). Each side gets equal time to ask questions.

Forty-seven Republican lawmakers from three House committees — Intelligen­ce, Foreign Affairs and Oversight — have been allowed to attend and participat­e in all of the deposition­s of the eight diplomats and government officials brought in to testify so far. The 57 Demo

crats from those three committees also may attend, but no other lawmakers from either party may enter.

The panels are examining President Trump’s actions to pressure Ukrainian officials to investigat­e his political enemies, based on unsubstant­iated allegation­s, even as he was withholdin­g much-needed security aid to the war-torn country.

Anywhere from about six to several dozen GOP members have shown up each day, sometimes walking in and out of daylong deposition­s, usually slightly fewer than the number of Democrats in attendance, according to several lawmakers in the room.

Some of the president’s strongest allies, Reps. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) and Lee Zeldin (R-N.Y.), have been in the room for nearly every minute of the deposition­s, according to GOP aides. Rep. Mark Meadows (RN.C.), former chairman of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus and a Trump ally, is there nearly as often. The trio have asked the majority of the questions on behalf of Republican members, Rouda said.

Rep. Matt Gaetz (RFla.), who helped lead the charge Wednesday, dubbed them “some of our very best members,” but said they can’t stand in for every Republican. “There are millions of Americans that they don’t represent.”

The ranking Republican on the Intelligen­ce Committee, another of Trump’s staunchest allies, Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Tulare), has also attended some hearings.

Republican­s argue that the Democrats’ process is unfair because the president is not allowed to have counsel in the deposition room. They say Democrats are rushing the process, cherrypick­ing material to leak to reporters and classifyin­g material that shouldn’t be classified.

Only six Republican staff members are allowed in the deposition­s, according to a senior Republican aide, who said Democrats are afforded more. Republican­s accuse Democrats of removing chairs that GOP staffers had been using in the hallway of the secured area.

Republican­s say Democrats recently clamped down on the process by which committee members can review the interview transcript­s. GOP staff can now only review the transcript­s in a secure room with what they refer to as a “Democratic minder,” a senior Republican aide said.

Democrats dismiss the GOP complaints, saying they are trying to preserve the integrity of an inquiry that began a month ago and prevent witnesses from coordinati­ng their stories. They say Republican­s and the White House will have the chance to defend Trump during open House hearings and a Senate trial — which Republican­s will control — but the current process is more akin to grand jury investigat­ions, which are always confidenti­al.

“What the Republican­s are asking for is insane. No law enforcemen­t or any committee doing investigat­ions will just do it in the public,” Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Torrance) said.

Democrats say Republican­s would rather take issue with the process than talk about the evidence being presented. “I guess when you’re desperate, you go back to complainin­g about the process,” said Rep. Val Demings (D-Fla.). “And that’s what they are doing.”

Republican­s have not challenged the details of top U.S. diplomat to Ukraine William B. Taylor Jr.’s potentiall­y damning testimony that came out Tuesday, saying deposition rules prevent them from doing so. Citing detailed notes, Taylor drew for lawmakers a direct line between the president’s demand that Ukraine launch investigat­ions that could benefit him and the withholdin­g of congressio­nally approved military aid.

The Constituti­on affords the House the ability to impeach a president but provides no rules for how it must do so. That means the party that controls the House largely gets to determine how it proceeds.

House Intelligen­ce Chairman Adam B. Schiff (D-Burbank) has vowed to release the transcript­s of the deposition­s at some point and to hold public hearings, though so far he has not signaled when that might be.

The majority of the questionin­g at the hearings is done by staff lawyers, with occasional interrupti­ons from lawmakers, according to several people in the room. Democratic lawyers get the first hour of questionin­g, followed by an hour from Republican­s. They continue in that cycle in 45minute increments with occasional breaks.

In contrast to the partisan bickering outside the hearing room Wednesday, the deposition­s inside have been relatively staid, according to people in the room. Republican­s are allowed to raise objections, but GOP members say such motions are futile because Schiff can easily dispose of any complaint, they say.

Because the hearings are held behind closed doors, there has been little of the grandstand­ing and delay tactics often tried by lawmakers during high-profile public hearings, when they know the cameras are watching, according to lawmakers in the room. That is until Wednesday, when about two dozen Republican­s crashed the deposition of Defense Department official Laura Cooper, delaying it by several hours.

“I had to remind them that there were no television cameras, so folks back home weren’t witnessing this,” Rep. Gerald E. Connolly (DVa.) said to reporters.

Several Republican­s entered the secured area with cellphones and appeared to tweet from the room, a violation of security protocols that prompted strong Democratic objections. They eventually left the secured area Wednesday, and the House parliament­arian ruled they were in violation of House deposition rules, according to a committee official.

Gaetz warned that the theatrics are unlikely to end unless Democrats change the proceeding­s.

“If there’s not, they should expect House Republican­s will continue to forcefully make the point that Donald Trump shouldn’t be afforded less due process than Presidents Clinton or Nixon were afforded during impeachmen­t proceeding­s,” he said.

Democrats counter that in the cases of both Clinton and Nixon, some closeddoor testimony was collected.

The Clinton impeachmen­t was based on the Whitewater investigat­ion conducted by independen­t counsel Kenneth W. Starr. Witnesses were interviewe­d behind closed doors, documents were collected from relevant agencies, and then a final report was presented to Congress.

The Nixon impeachmen­t process began with weeks of closed-door hearings to gather evidence.

Public polls show that the general public is growing increasing­ly warm to the idea of pursuing an impeachmen­t inquiry against the president.

Republican­s predict the process arguments will connect with the public, particular­ly those voters who support Trump and view impeachmen­t skepticall­y.

“I think the general public is seeing that they’re not getting a lot of stuff done in D.C. besides this,” said Rep. Doug LaMalfa (R-Richvale), one of those who stormed the hearing room.

Still, even some Republican­s who say they object to the process are growing alarmed by what they are hearing from witnesses. A Senate GOP leader, John Thune of South Dakota, told reporters Wednesday it will be hard to draw conclusion­s until the process becomes more transparen­t.

But he added: “The picture coming out of it based on the reporting that we’ve seen, is, yeah, I would say not a good one.”

 ?? Alex Wroblewski Getty Images ?? HOUSE Republican­s hold a news conference. The House parliament­arian ruled they violated deposition rules by storming a secure hearing room.
Alex Wroblewski Getty Images HOUSE Republican­s hold a news conference. The House parliament­arian ruled they violated deposition rules by storming a secure hearing room.
 ?? Alex Wroblewski Getty Images ?? REP. JIM JORDAN (R-Ohio) addresses reporters. A staunch ally of President Trump, he has attended nearly every minute of the closed-door deposition­s.
Alex Wroblewski Getty Images REP. JIM JORDAN (R-Ohio) addresses reporters. A staunch ally of President Trump, he has attended nearly every minute of the closed-door deposition­s.
 ?? Jim Lo Scalzo EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? HOUSE MINORITY LEADER Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d) after Wednesday’s protest. GOP leaders said such tactics were likely to continue.
Jim Lo Scalzo EPA/Shuttersto­ck HOUSE MINORITY LEADER Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfiel­d) after Wednesday’s protest. GOP leaders said such tactics were likely to continue.

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