The Oklahoman

Panel votes to air Dems’ Russia-inquiry memo

- BY MARY CLARE JALONICK AND CHAD DAY

WASHINGTON — The House intelligen­ce committee’s inquiry of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election spun further into charges and counter-charges among angry U.S. lawmakers and President Donald Trump on Monday as the panel voted to release a second classified memo about whether the FBI and Justice Department conspired against him.

This memo was written by Democrats on the panel who are pushing back against a GOP document, declassifi­ed by Trump last week, that criticizes the methods the FBI used to obtain a surveillan­ce warrant on a onetime Trump campaign associate. The Democratic document attempts to counter some of the arguments and evidence put forward by the Republican­s.

The battle of classified memos has further deepened the partisan divide on the committee, which is supposed to be jointly investigat­ing the Russian meddling and possible connection­s between Russia and the Trump presidenti­al campaign. It also takes attention from the separate investigat­ions by special counsel Robert Mueller and the Senate intelligen­ce committee.

Trump said over the weekend that the GOP memo “totally vindicates” him. Both Republican­s and Democrats disputed that, and Democrats also bemoaned the release of formerly classified informatio­n and the possibilit­y the precedent could compromise future investigat­ions.

After the House committee’s vote, which was unanimous, Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the panel’s top Democrat, said he believed the Democratic document would “help inform the public of the many distortion­s and inaccuraci­es in the majority memo.” But he also said he was concerned about “political redactions” the White House might make before its release.

The president now has five days to decide whether to allow the material’s publicatio­n.

Tensions between Trump and the Democrats were high before the vote, as the president and Schiff traded insults on Twitter on Monday morning — less than a week after Trump called for more bipartisan­ship in his State of the Union address.

Trump tweeted that Schiff is “one of the biggest liars and leakers in Washington” and “must be stopped.”

Schiff quickly shot back: “Instead of tweeting false smears, the American people would appreciate it if you turned off the TV and helped solve the funding crisis, protected Dreamers or ... really anything else.”

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