Special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation may be over, but new political battles are just beginning between Congress and the executive branch. President Trump on Monday took aim at Democratic lawmakers and the news media at the same time Pelosi and key committee overseers met to assess their footing when it comes to investigations tied to Mueller’s evidence. In the interim, Pelosi urged her colleagues on Monday to talk about Democrats’ policy agenda, not Russia. House Democrats say they want the public release of the special counsel’s findings and evidence in a week, and they want Attorney General William Barr to testify about the contents of his four-page letter summarizing Mueller’s finding that there was no Trump-Russia conspiracy behind the 2016 election, as well as Barr’s decision that there is no basis for a criminal case against Trump alleging obstruction of justice. The Hill: Democrats face a dilemma. NBC News: Six Democratic committee chairs in the House seek Mueller report by April 2 The Hill: Barr is at the center of a political storm. NPR: Impeachment action less likely. Senate Republicans say they back the president and believe some of their Democratic colleagues are Trump-fixated extremists who persist in chasing phantoms. “It’s over. And I say this gently to the president, I will say: When you get what you want, it’s time to move on and talk about other issues. …I know some of my Democratic colleagues will not leave it alone. Some of them have two speeds: hostile and smart-ass, and they’re never going to leave it alone because they didn’t want the American people to pick Donald Trump to be president.” — Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), one of Trump’s most outspoken allies in Congress, says Barr has agreed to testify to his committee on an unspecified date. “He said he'd be glad to come, just give him some time to figure out, you know, as soon as possible, but thoroughly vet the report and make sure we don't compromise anybody's security," Graham told reporters on Monday afternoon. Barr will confer with Mueller about what should be made public, Graham added (The Hill). Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), ranking member of the Judiciary Committee, asked Barr by letter to release the Mueller material by April 1 (The Hill). The Judiciary chairman also wants to focus on the Justice Department’s Russia probe before Mueller was appointed, including subjects that animate the president: the FBI’s handling of Hillary Clinton’s emails and what Republicans say was evidence of political bias inside the Justice Department against Trump. Reuters: Graham wants to “unpack the other side of the story” through the appointment of a new special counsel. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) blocked a resolution on Monday backed by Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) calling for the Mueller report to be publicly disclosed. McConnell argued that Barr and Mueller are working toward release of information and should be given time to complete their consultations (The Hill). Trump said on Monday that “it wouldn’t bother me at all” if the special counsel’s report is publicly released (NBC News). Despite hundreds of tweets and rhetoric calling the Russia investigation a politically-stoked “witch hunt,” the president also commented that Mueller acted honorably during the 22-month probe, which produced 34 criminal indictments (The Hill). But the president signaled he’s not in a forgiving mood. “There are a lot of people out there that have done some very, very evil things, very bad things, I would say treasonous things against our country,” he told reporters without being specific. Jordan Fabian reports that Trump and his supporters appear eager to exact revenge on certain congressional Democrats and those perceived to be partisan critics. They’ve suggested some lawmakers and journalists should lose their jobs for their roles in inquiries about Russia’s interference in the 2016 election and its efforts to help the Trump campaign (The Hill). House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) is one such target. © Twitter What the president, the Justice Department and the White House counsel believe the public should see from Mueller’s findings remains vague, and a resolution between the legislative and executive branches is expected to be prolonged. It is possible arguments about disclosure wind up in court. Trump lawyer Jay Sekulow said on Monday he would not want the president to publicly release his written answers to Mueller’s questions when no criminal case was brought against the president. “This is something, frankly, that should never have happened. This is a two-year waste of taxpayer time and dollars. They spent over $25 million on this just to find out that there was nothing there. This should never happen to another president, and we want to make sure that the institution of the president is protected.” — White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders on NBC’s Today. Sanders also said there has been no discussion of pardoning former Trump aides who wound up in Mueller’s crosshairs (The Hill). More coverage … The news media are under intense criticism in some quarters after the Barr-Mueller findings were released on Sunday (The Hill). Trump’s supporters turned their fire on news outlets that won Pulitzer Prizes for investigative reporting about Trump and Russia (NBC News). … Why was obstruction a hard case for Mueller to make? (Reuters) … The Supreme Court denied an unnamed foreign government-owned corporation’s request to appeal Mueller’s subpoena (CNN) … Profile of Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), a key member of the House Judiciary and Oversight and Reform committees (The Hill). |
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