The Arizona Republic

GOP pushes Hunter Biden probe

Dems relaunch effort to counter investigat­ions

- Colleen Long

WASHINGTON – Even with their threadbare House majority, Republican­s doubled down last week on using their new power next year to investigat­e the Biden administra­tion and, in particular, the president’s son.

But the midterm results have emboldened a White House that has long prepared for this moment. Republican­s secured much smaller margins than anticipate­d, and aides to President Joe Biden and other Democrats believe voters punished the GOP for its reliance on conspiracy theories and Donald Trumpfuele­d lies over the 2020 election.

They see it as validation for the administra­tion’s playbook for the midterms and going forward to focus on legislativ­e achievemen­ts and continue them, in contrast to Trump-aligned candidates whose complaints about the president’s son played to their most loyal supporters and were too far in the weeds for the average American. The Democrats retained control of the Senate, and the GOP’s margin in the House is expected to be the slimmest majority in two decades.

“If you look back, we picked up seats in New York, New Jersey, California,” said Mike DuHaime, a Republican strategist and public affairs executive. “These were not voters coming to the polls because they wanted Hunter Biden investigat­ed – far from it. They were coming to the polls because they were upset about inflation. They’re upset about gas prices. They’re upset about what’s going on with the war in Ukraine.”

But House Republican­s used their first news conference after clinching the majority to discuss presidenti­al son Hunter Biden and the Justice Department, renewing long-held grievances about what they claim is a politicize­d law enforcemen­t agency and a bombshell corruption case overlooked by Democrats and the media.

“From their first press conference, these congressio­nal Republican­s made clear that they’re going to do one thing in this new Congress, which is investigat­ions, and they’re doing this for political payback for Biden’s efforts on an agenda that helps working people,” said Kyle Herrig, the founder of the Congressio­nal Integrity Project, a newly relaunched, multimilli­on-dollar effort by Democratic strategist­s to counter the onslaught of House GOP probes.

Inside the White House, the counsel’s office added staff months ago and beefed up its communicat­ion efforts, and staff members have been deep into researchin­g and preparing for the onslaught. They’ve worked to try to identify their own vulnerabil­ities and plan effective responses. But anything the House seeks related to Hunter Biden, who is not a White House staffer, will come from his attorneys, who have declined to respond to the allegation­s.

Rep. James Comer, incoming chairman of the House Oversight Committee, said there are “troubling questions” of the utmost importance about Hunter Biden’s business dealings and one of the

president’s brothers, James Biden, that require deeper investigat­ion. He said they were examining the president, too.

“Rooting out waste, fraud and abuse in the federal government is the primary mission of the Oversight Committee,” said Comer, R-Kentucky. “As such, this investigat­ion is a top priority.”

Republican legislator­s promised a trove of new informatio­n this past week, but what they have presented so far has been a condensed review of a few years’ worth of complaints about Hunter Biden’s business dealings, going back to conspiracy theories raised by Trump.

Hunter Biden joined the board of the Ukrainian gas company Burisma in 2014, around the time his father, then vice president, was helping conduct the Obama administra­tion’s foreign policy with Ukraine. Senate Republican­s have said the appointmen­t may have posed a conflict of interest, but they did not present evidence that the hiring influenced U.S. policies, and they did not implicate Joe Biden in any wrongdoing.

Republican lawmakers and their staff for the past year have been analyzing messages and financial transactio­ns found on a laptop that belonged to Hunter Biden. They long have discussed issuing congressio­nal subpoenas to foreign entities that did business with him, and they recently brought on James Mandolfo, a former federal prosecutor, to assist with the investigat­ion as general counsel for the Oversight Committee.

The difference now is that Republican­s will have subpoena power to follow through.

“The Republican­s are going to go ahead,” said Tom Davis, a Republican lawyer who specialize­s in congressio­nal investigat­ions and legislativ­e strategy. “I think their members are enthusiast­ic about going after this stuff ... there are a lot of unanswered questions. Look, the 40-year trend is parties under-investigat­e their own and over-investigat­e the other party. It didn’t start here.”

Hunter Biden’s taxes and foreign business work are already under federal investigat­ion, with a grand jury in Delaware hearing testimony in recent months.

While he never held a position on the presidenti­al campaign or in the White House, his membership on the board of the Ukrainian energy company and his efforts to strike deals in China have long raised questions about whether he traded on his father’s public service, including reported references in his emails to the “big guy.”

Joe Biden has said he’s never spoken to his son about his foreign business, and nothing the Republican­s have put forth suggests otherwise. And there are no indication­s that the federal investigat­ion involves the president.

On Friday, Garland appointed a special counsel to oversee the Justice Department’s investigat­ion into the presence of classified documents at Trump’s Florida estate as well as key aspects of a separate probe involving the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on and efforts to undo the 2020 election.

Trump, in a speech Friday night at his Mar-a-Lago estate, slammed the developmen­t as “the latest in a long series of witch hunts.”

Of Joe and Hunter Biden, he asked, “Where’s their special prosecutor?”

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP ?? Reps. Kevin McCarthy, right, and Steve Scalise, R-La., are seen Tuesday in Washington. Republican lawmakers and their staff for the past year have been analyzing messages and financial transactio­ns found on a laptop that belonged to Hunter Biden.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP Reps. Kevin McCarthy, right, and Steve Scalise, R-La., are seen Tuesday in Washington. Republican lawmakers and their staff for the past year have been analyzing messages and financial transactio­ns found on a laptop that belonged to Hunter Biden.

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