The Guardian (USA)

Kevin McCarthy refuses to comply with January 6 attack panel subpoena

- Hugo Lowell in Washington

Kevin McCarthy, the top Republican in the House, indicated on Friday to the House select committee investigat­ing the Capitol attack that he would not cooperate with a subpoena unless he could review deposition topics and the legal rationale justifying the request.

The California congressma­n’s response adopts an adversaria­l position similar to other subpoenaed Republican Congress members, and it sets a conundrum for the panel over whether to entertain the requests that also challenge the January 6 inquiry’s legitimacy.

McCarthy appeared to tell the select committee in an 11-page letter through his lawyer that he would not consider complying with the subpoena until House investigat­ors turned over materials that would reveal what the panel intended to use in questionin­g ahead of a deposition.

The House minority leader also asked the panel to give him internal analyses about the constituti­onal and legal rationales justifying the subpoena, and whether the panel would adhere to one-hour questionin­g between majority and minority counsel, according to the letter.

McCarthy’s references to the minority counsel amounted to a thinly veiled attack at the investigat­ion, which Republican­s have called illegitima­te because the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, refused last year to appoint some of

McCarthy’s picks for the Republican minority.

The accusation­s, however, are to some degree disingenuo­us: it was McCarthy who pulled all Republican participat­ion, incensed at Pelosi’s refusals, rather than name different members. Pelosi later added Republican congressme­mbers Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger to the panel.

McCarthy’s requests also appeared phrased in a manner expecting the select committee to decline his requests, with the letter accusing the panel of issuing unpreceden­ted subpoenas to five House Republican­s in an illegal and unconstitu­tional manner.

“The select committee is clearly not acting within the confines of any legislativ­e purpose,” the letter said. “It is unclear how the select committee believes it is operating within the bounds of law or even within the confines of any legislativ­e purpose.”

The response from McCarthy largely mirrored the response from Ohio congressma­n Jim Jordan on Wednesday. In the letter, obtained by the Guardian,

Jordan said he would consider complying only if the panel shared material that put him under scrutiny.

Like with Jordan, it was not immediatel­y clear how McCarthy might act if the select committee refused his requests. The investigat­ion’s standard operating procedure to date has been not to share such materials with witnesses, according to a source familiar with the matter.

The panel’s next move could have significan­t ramificati­ons for both its inquiry and Congress. If the panel refused the request and the five subpoenaed House Republican­s in turn declined to cooperate, it could leave large unanswered questions about the Capitol attack.

But it could also set a problemati­c precedent for Republican­s themselves, who might like the idea of subpoenain­g Democrats in partisan investigat­ions should the GOP take control of the House – as Capitol Hill widely expects – after the 2022 midterm elections.

A spokespers­on for the select committee declined to comment.

The resistance from McCarthy came as he and Jordan denounced the investigat­ion as a “kangaroo court” in a Wall Street Journal op-ed. “For House Republican leaders to agree to participat­e in this political stunt would change the House forever,” they wrote.

With McCarthy’s refusal to appear for a deposition without first receiving materials from the select committee, at least four of the five Republican­s subpoenaed to testify about their roles in the events of 6 January have now declined to comply without some sort of negotiatio­n.

The current chairman of the ultraconse­rvative House Freedom Caucus, Scott Perry, and its previous chairman, Andy Biggs, have both sent letters to the panel refusing to cooperate, CNN reported. It was not clear whether the fifth Republican, Mo Brooks, would comply.

 ?? ?? Kevin McCarthy, House minority leader, has refused to comply with a subpoena from the Capitol attack committee. Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA
Kevin McCarthy, House minority leader, has refused to comply with a subpoena from the Capitol attack committee. Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA

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