San Antonio Express-News

Jan. 6 panel subpoenas 5 GOP lawmakers

- By Luke Broadwater and Emily Cochrane

WASHINGTON — The House committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol issued subpoenas Thursday to five Republican members of Congress, including Rep. Kevin Mccarthy, the minority leader, who had refused to meet with the panel voluntaril­y.

The committee’s leaders had been reluctant to issue subpoenas to their fellow lawmakers. That is an extraordin­arily rare step for most congressio­nal panels to take, although the House Ethics Committee, which is responsibl­e for investigat­ing allegation­s of misconduct by members, is known to do so.

The panel said it was demanding testimony from Mccarthy, of California, who engaged in a heated phone call with President Donald Trump during the Capitol violence in 2021; Rep. Scott Perry of Pennsylvan­ia, who coordinate­d a plan to try to replace the acting attorney general after he resisted Trump’s false claims of widespread fraud; Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, who was deeply involved in the effort to fight the election results; Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona, the former leader of the ultraconse­rvative House Freedom Caucus; and Rep. Mo Brooks of Alabama, who has said Trump has continued to seek an unlawful reinstatem­ent to office for more than a year.

All five have refused requests for voluntary interviews about the roles they played in the buildup to the attack by supporters of the former president who believed his lie of widespread election fraud.

Mccarthy told reporters on Capitol Hill on Thursday that he had not yet seen the subpoena.

“My view on the committee has not changed,” he said. “They’re not conducting a legitimate investigat­ion. It seems as though they just want to go after their political opponents.”

Perry called the investigat­ion “a charade” and a “political witch hunt” by Democrats that is “about fabricatin­g headlines and distractin­g the Americans from their abysmal record of running America into the ground.”

The subpoenas come as the committee is ramping up for a series of public hearings next month to reveal its findings. The eight hearings are scheduled to take place over several weeks beginning June 9, some during prime time in an effort to attract a large television audience.

“The select committee has learned that several of our colleagues have informatio­n relevant to our investigat­ion into the attack on Jan. 6 and the events leading up to it,” Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-miss., chair of the committee, said in a statement. “Before we hold our hearings next month, we wished to provide members the opportunit­y to discuss these matters with the committee voluntaril­y. Regrettabl­y,

the individual­s receiving subpoenas today have refused, and we’re forced to take this step to help ensure the committee uncovers facts concerning Jan. 6.”

For weeks, members and investigat­ors on the special House panel have privately agonized over how aggressive­ly to pursue sitting members of Congress, weighing their desire for informatio­n about lawmakers’ direct interactio­ns with Trump against the potential legal difficulty and political consequenc­es of doing so.

In letters to the lawmakers sent Thursday, Thompson wrote that their refusal to cooperate had left the panel with “no choice” but to issue subpoenas.

Rep. Liz Cheney, Rwyo., vice chair of the committee, said the decision was not made lightly. “It’s a reflection of how important and serious the investigat­ion is, and how grave the attack on the Capitol was,” she said.

The subpoena to Mccarthy is particular­ly noteworthy because he is in line to become speaker if Republican­s win control of the House this November. Should he refuse to comply, it could set in motion a process that could lead to a Democratic-controlled House holding him in contempt of Congress as the midterm elections loom.

Mccarthy has long feared being subpoenaed in the investigat­ion. In recent months, he has been in discussion­s with William A. Burck, a longtime Washington lawyer, about how to fight a subpoena.

The committee wants to question Mccarthy about conversati­ons he had after the attack about the president’s culpabilit­y in the assault and what should be done to address it. The committee has also suggested that Trump may have influenced Mccarthy’s refusal to cooperate with the investigat­ion.

Mccarthy issued a blistering statement in January condemning the committee as illegitima­te and saying he would refuse to cooperate with its inquiry. He has argued that the panel was violating the privacy of Republican­s through subpoenas for bank and phone records. Mccarthy also denounced Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Dcalif., for having rejected two of his five choices to sit on the panel — one of whom was Jordan.

Rep. Jamie Raskin, DMD., a member of the committee, said the panel had conducted more than 1,000 interviews but needed to hear from those members of Congress who were so closely involved in the former president’s plans.

“The precedent we want to establish with our work is that people should not try to overturn the electoral and political institutio­ns of the United States,” he said.

The committee has also sought an interview with Rep. Ronny Jackson, Rtexas,

Trump’s former White House doctor, about why he was mentioned in encrypted messages from the Oath Keepers militia group, some of whose members have been charged criminally in connection with the attack.

Jackson has also refused to voluntaril­y cooperate, but he was not among those issued a subpoena Thursday.

Pelosi declined to comment. Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, the No. 2 House Democrat, said he was not worried that Republican­s would try to seek revenge by issuing their own subpoenas in other investigat­ions if they win the House.

“We ought to all be subject to being asked to tell the truth before a committee that is seeking informatio­n that is important to our country and our democracy,” Hoyer said.

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press ?? House Minority Leader Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., reacts Thursday after learning of his subpoena to appear before the Jan. 6 committee.
J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press House Minority Leader Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., reacts Thursday after learning of his subpoena to appear before the Jan. 6 committee.

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