Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hand over records, say lawmakers

Give all on Comey contact, his notes, Trump team told

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

WASHINGTON — Congressio­nal Republican­s are increasing pressure on President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to produce records related to the latest string of controvers­ies involving the president.

As the White House sought to contain the damage from two provocativ­e incidents, leaders of two key Senate committees asked the FBI for documents related to former Director James Comey, who was leading an investigat­ion into possible Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election before Trump fired him last week.

The Republican chairmen and ranking Democrats on the Senate Intelligen­ce and Judiciary committees asked the FBI to hand over Comey’s notes about his communicat­ions with the White House and senior Justice Department officials that are related to the Russia investigat­ion.

The Judiciary Committee leaders also asked the White House to provide any records of interactio­ns between Trump officials and Comey, including audio recordings. In a nod to lawmakers’ strong desire to hear from the former director,

the Intelligen­ce Committee leaders asked him to testify in both open and closed sessions.

Meanwhile, House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz, R- Utah, scheduled a hearing for next Wednesday about whether Trump interfered in the FBI’s investigat­ion and invited Comey to testify.

The requests came after news reports revealed Trump’s disclosure of highly classified material to Russian officials and an alleged attempt to shut down an investigat­ion into his former national security adviser, Michael Flynn. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein will brief the full Senate today on Comey’s firing.

On Wednesday, some members of the GOP began predicting that the party will rally behind some sort of independen­t investigat­ive body to probe the two matters.

Rep. Charlie Dent, R-Pa., co- chairman of the moderate-Republican Tuesday

Group, said the collective political fallout from the past week “will make it difficult” for Republican­s to resist a change in approach.

Dent said he does not like investigat­ions by independen­t prosecutor­s because they “tend to take on a life of their own,” and instead preferred an independen­t commission of outside experts.

“We may have to move in that direction,” Dent said Wednesday at a forum moderated by Center Forward, a moderate Democratic organizati­on.

The conjunctio­n of the two controvers­ies Tuesday night left Republican­s reeling, with a senior GOP senator comparing the situation to Watergate, and Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., directing the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform to immediatel­y seek records from the FBI.

Ryan was careful to strike an evenhanded tone Wednesday, saying congressio­nal committees would continue to conduct oversight “regardless of what party is in the White House” but seeming to dismiss some concerns that have arisen in the wake of news about a memo by Comey suggesting that Trump had pressured him to drop the Flynn investigat­ion.

“There’s clearly a lot of politics being played here,” Ryan said. “Our job is to get the facts and to be sober about doing that.”

He noted FBI acting Director Andrew McCabe’s recent comment that there has been “no effort to impede our investigat­ion.” McCabe made the remark in a congressio­nal hearing when asked whether the firing of Comey had affected the bureau’s work.

Ryan also sounded a skeptical note about Comey’s actions after the meeting in which Trump allegedly asked him to “let this go,” referring to the Flynn investigat­ion.

“If this happened as he described, why didn’t [Comey] take action at the time?” Ryan said. Asked on his way out of the news conference whether he still retained confidence in Trump, Ryan replied, “I do.”

Meanwhile, Rep. Elijah Cummings, top Democrat on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, accused the Republican­s of taking great pains to “do as little as humanly possible, just to claim that they’re doing something.”

“Speaker Ryan has shown he has zero, zero, zero appetite for any investigat­ion of Donald Trump,” he said.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has not directly commented on allegation­s that Trump tried to pressure Comey. He did not mention the president or the controvers­ies facing the White House during his morning remarks on the Senate floor and ignored questions from reporters in the halls of the Capitol.

PUTIN’S OFFER OF ‘RECORD’

Interest was hardly limited to the U.S., as Russia’s Vladimir Putin called the allegation­s surroundin­g Trump evidence of “political schizophre­nia spreading in the U.S.” He offered to furnish a “record” of the Trump-diplomats meeting in the Oval Office if the White House desired it.

Putin, watching from afar, said the “evolving political struggle” had gone from something of an amusement to serious cause for concern, and he suggested Trump’s critics were stoking anti-Russian sentiment to damage the president.

“These people either don’t understand that they are hurting their own country, and in that case they are just dumb,” Putin said. “Or they do understand everything, and that means that they are dangerous and unscrupulo­us.”

Lawmakers from both parties rejected Putin’s offer.

“The idea that we would accept any evidence from President Putin is absurd,” Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said in an interview with CNN.

“I don’t talk to murderous dictators like Vladimir Putin, so Putin’s word to me doesn’t mean a whole lot,” Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, a member of the Republican leadership, told the news channel.

“Probably the last person the president needs to vouch for him right now is Vladimir Putin,” Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said in an interview with CBS News. “Its credibilit­y would be less than zero.”

There was no word on what Putin’s record might entail, a question many were likely to raise in light of Trump’s recent warning to Comey that he had “better hope” there were no tapes of a discussion they’d had.

The White House disputed Comey’s account of the February conversati­on concerning Flynn but did not offer specifics. Several members of Congress said that if Trump did suggest that Comey “let this go” regarding Flynn’s Russian contacts, it was probably just a joke, light banter.

Trump did not offer any commentary on Twitter and did not directly address the controvers­ies during a commenceme­nt address at the Coast Guard Academy, though he delivered a broadside against the forces he sees as working against him.

“No politician in history, and I say this with great surety, has been treated worse or more unfairly,” he said. “You can’t let the critics and the naysayers get in the way of your dreams. … Adversity makes you stronger. Don’t give in, don’t back down. … And the more righteous your fight, the more opposition that you will face.”

MCCAIN: LIKE WATERGATE

Questions about Trump’s conduct have been mounting for weeks, most recently with revelation­s that the president allegedly pressed Comey to drop a federal investigat­ion into Flynn’s contacts with Russia and that he disclosed classified informatio­n to the senior Russian officials last week.

Initial informatio­n about both matters came from anonymous sources, and the White House was quick to denounce the leaks and deny any impropriet­y, insisting that the president never tried to squelch the Flynn investigat­ion and that the disclosure­s to the Russians weren’t inappropri­ate.

On Tuesday night, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., compared the current situation to the Watergate scandal while speaking at an Internatio­nal Republican Institute dinner.

“We’ve seen this movie before. I think it’s reaching the point where it’s of Watergate size and scale and a couple of other scandals that you and I have seen,” McCain told Bob Schieffer of CBS News. “It’s a centipede, and the shoe continues to drop.”

Asked Wednesday whether the situation could lead to impeachmen­t, McCain responded: “I have no idea on that — come on.”

The senator’s spokesman, Julie Tarallo, said the comparison was “simply meant to convey that the constant revelation­s of events surroundin­g Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election are reminiscen­t of past scandals, are not good for America and require further scrutiny.”

When asked what he’d say to Trump, McCain replied: “Get it all out. It’s not going to be over until every aspect of it is thoroughly examined and the American people have made a judgment. And the longer you delay, the longer it’s going to last.”

Other Republican senators, while saying they need to review documents before making a final judgment, voiced doubts about Trump.

“There’s a lot here that’s really scary,” Sen. Ben Sasse, R- Neb., said Wednesday morning in an interview with conservati­ve radio host Hugh Hewitt. “It’s obviously inappropri­ate for any president to be trying to interfere with an investigat­ion.”

Collins, a member of the Intelligen­ce Committee, and Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, reissued calls Wednesday for the Justice Department to consider appointing a special prosecutor to probe Russia’s election interferen­ce.

The White House has been largely silent since The New York Times first reported on Trump’s alleged effort to end the Flynn investigat­ion by pressuring Comey. Trump aides have not directly commented on the story and were absent from television shows starting Tuesday night, a notable difference from last week, when they blanketed the networks to defend Comey’s firing.

Both Republican­s and Democrats have called on Trump, in regard to his suggestion that he records his conversati­ons, to provide a transcript of the meeting to congressio­nal intelligen­ce committees so they can assess what took place.

White House aides have neither confirmed nor denied the possibilit­y that Trump keeps tapes of his meetings.

Trump is preparing to leave town Friday on his first foreign trip, and aides have been hopeful the journey will be a chance for the administra­tion to get back on track after weeks of chaos and distractio­ns.

 ?? AP/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE ?? House Speaker Paul Ryan leaves a news conference Wednesday at Republican National Committee headquarte­rs in Washington. “There’s clearly a lot of politics being played here,” Ryan said, while directing House members to immediatel­y seek FBI records for...
AP/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE House Speaker Paul Ryan leaves a news conference Wednesday at Republican National Committee headquarte­rs in Washington. “There’s clearly a lot of politics being played here,” Ryan said, while directing House members to immediatel­y seek FBI records for...

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