The Guardian (USA)

Capitol attack panel moves closer to issuing subpoenas to Republican­s

- Hugo Lowell in Washington DC

Members on the House select committee investigat­ing the Capitol attack on 6 January are moving closer to issuing subpoenas to Republican members of Congress to compel their cooperatio­n in the inquiry – though it has started to dawn on them that they may be out of time.

The panel is expected to make a final decision on the subpoena question over the next couple of weeks, according to sources directly familiar with internal deliberati­ons, with House investigat­ors needing to start wrapping up their work before public hearings in June.

While the members on the select committee remain undecided about whether to subpoena Republican members of Congress, their refusal to assist the investigat­ion in any form has caused the sentiment to turn towards taking that near-unpreceden­ted action, the sources said.

The shifting view has come as a result of the dismay among the members in January, when House minority leader Kevin McCarthy and others turned down requests for voluntary cooperatio­n, turning to anger after three more of Donald Trump’s allies last week refused to cooperate.

What has changed in recent weeks in the select committee’s assessment is that they cannot ignore the deep involvemen­t between some Republican members of Congress and the former president’s unlawful schemes to overturn the results of the 2020 election, the sources said.

The recent letters to House Republican­s Mo Brooks, Andy Biggs and Ronny Jackson – Trump’s former White House doctor – provided just a snapshot of the entangleme­nt, the sources said, with the Trump White House, and possibly the militia groups that attacked the Capitol.

House investigat­ors are particular­ly interested in any connection­s between Republican members of Congress and the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys militia groups, the sources said, since those groups were actually involved in the riot element of January 6.

The select committee wanted to interview Jackson, for instance, to establish how the Oath Keepers came to learn as they stormed the Capitol that he had “critical data to protect” and needed “protection”, according to text messages revealed in court filings.

But the panel has been holding off compelling that informatio­n with subpoenas, anxious about the inevitable circus that would accompany such a move and, as the Guardian reported in January, embolden Republican­s to subpoena Democrats if they take the House in 2022.

The select committee told itself, the sources said, it might be able to avoid the difficulty altogether if it could get the informatio­n it needed from other places, as it did with Trump’s former chief of staff Mark Meadows when his aides provided testimony.

But that has not happened, and especially not with respect to the issue of possible connection­s between Republican members of Congress and the militia groups, whose members are now largely unable to talk to the panel, having been placed under criminal investigat­ion by the DoJ.

The trouble for the select committee is that it may have run out of time to go down the subpoena route.

Even if the panel were now to issue a bevy of subpoenas to House Republican­s, if their colleagues decide to ignore the subpoenas, the only real option it has to enforce the orders would be to pursue action through the slow-grinding cogs of the judicial system.

That enforcemen­t mechanism would probably take months, according to former prosecutor­s – an exercise potentiall­y of little use to a panel that is seeking to start wrapping up deposition­s before public hearings in June and expects to publish a final report in September.

But some members believe Republican­s may just cooperate if they are subpoenaed, the sources said, since Republican subpoenas to Democrats in a future investigat­ion would only have teeth if Republican­s don’t defang the very congressio­nal subpoenas first – by defying them.

 ?? Photograph: Shawn Thew/EPA ?? The US Capitol dome reflected on a puddle in Washington DC.
Photograph: Shawn Thew/EPA The US Capitol dome reflected on a puddle in Washington DC.

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