Dems reject Barr’s offer to view Mueller report with fewer redactions
Top congressional Democrats on Friday rejected Attorney General William Barr’s offer to let a select group of lawmakers review redacted sections of special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigative report.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) and the top Democrats on the Intelligence and Judiciary committees in both chambers argued in a letter on Friday that Barr’s offer is too rigid. They said the number of lawmakers who can review the redacted text is too small, and they took issue with not being able to see all the information, including grand jury material.
{mosads}”Unfortunately, your proposed accommodation — which among other things would prohibit discussion of the full report, even with other Committee Members — is not acceptable,” the Democrats wrote in their letter to Barr.
“Given the comprehensive factual findings presented by the Special Counsel’s Report, some of which will only be fully understood with access to the redacted material, we cannot agree to the conditions you are placing on our access to the full report. Nor can we agree to an arrangement that does not include a mechanism for ensuring access to grand jury material,” they added.
Their letter comes after Assistant Attorney General Stephen Boyd notified House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) on Thursday, following the release of a redacted version of the 448-page report, that Barr has agreed to provide their committees and the Gang of Eight access to details in Mueller’s report that were restricted in the public version.
Barr’s offer would allow the lawmakers to review sensitive information uncovered during Mueller’s 22-month probe, including matters related to national security and details that relate to ongoing criminal investigations.
Democrats said Friday that while they won’t accept the offer, they are willing to work with Barr to reach “a reasonable accommodation” so that the Justice Department can continue to “protect law enforcement sensitive information,” while allowing lawmakers to review information they view as necessary in order to conduct their oversight responsibilities.
Barr has said that he is operating within the guidelines of the special counsel regulations by not providing Congress with information like grand jury materials.
Nadler, who signed Friday’s letter, issued a subpoena earlier in the day in an attempt to compel Barr to provide Congress with the full report and its underlying evidence, the first legal move in what is gearing up to become a protracted court battle.
The other Democratic lawmakers who signed the letter are House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff (Calif.), Senate Judiciary Committee ranking member Dianne Feinstein (Calif.) and Senate Intelligence Vice Chairman Mark Warner (Va.).
Republicans slammed the move, saying Nadler and other Democrats are rejecting the very information they want provided to Congress.
“Democrats demand answers but put their hands over their eyes every time those answers appear,” a spokesperson for House Judiciary Republicans said in a statement. “Attorney General Barr has given unprecedented accommodations to Chairman Nadler, and it’s unconscionable the chairman refuses receipt of information he’s claimed for weeks Democrats are ‘entitled to.’ Who subpoenas a report and publicly refuses to read it in the same day?”
Updated at 4:48 p.m.
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