Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

White House lawyer defies impeachmen­t subpoena,

Trump’s orders not to cooperate followed

- Mary Clare Jalonick and Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON – The lead lawyer for the National Security Council defied a subpoena Monday to appear before House impeachmen­t investigat­ors, as did other White House witnesses, following President Donald Trump’s orders not to cooperate with the probe.

John Eisenberg and White House aide Robert Blair did not show up for scheduled 9 a.m. interviews in the Democrats’ impeachmen­t inquiry, and two other White House witnesses scheduled for the afternoon, National Security Council aide Michael Ellis and Office of

Management and Budget aide Brian McCormack, were also not expected to show, according to a person familiar with the matter who requested anonymity to discuss the confidential interviews. All four witnesses had been subpoenaed.

Democrats want to talk to all four about the machinatio­ns inside the White House before and after Trump held a July phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymir Zelenskiy and asked him to pursue investigat­ions into political rival Joe Biden and his family and Ukraine’s involvemen­t in the 2016 election. Eisenberg was instrument­al in discussion­s about how to handle a White House memo recounting the

Trump phone call with Ukraine that is central to the impeachmen­t inquiry.

Blair is a top aide to acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney, and McCormack is a former chief of staff to Energy Secretary Rick Perry, who led a U.S. delegation to Ukraine for Zelenskiy’s inaugurati­on in May. Ellis is Eisenberg’s deputy and a former Republican aide to the House intelligen­ce panel.

The three committees leading the impeachmen­t probe informed Ellis and Blair of the subpoenas in letters to their lawyers on Monday morning. In the letters, the heads of the three committees said they had been told by the lawyers that their clients would not appear because a White House lawyer could not be present – one of the points that Trump and Republican­s in Congress have used in describing the Democrats’ impeachmen­t process as a “sham.”

The heads of the three committees – House Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, House Foreign Affairs Chairman Eliot Engel and acting House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney – wrote the lawyers that the argument has no merit and is “the latest in a long line of baseless procedural challenges to the House of Representa­tives’ authority to fulfill one of its most solemn responsibi­lities under the Constituti­on.”

The committees subpoenaed Eisenberg and McCormack last week.

Several more witnesses are scheduled this week, even though the House is on recess. Witnesses called include Perry and former national security adviser John Bolton, but it is unclear if any of them will show up.

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Eisenberg

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