Republicans in crosshairs of 6 January panel
begin campaign of intimidation
House leader Kevin McCarthy threatened retaliation
against tech companies that share records with the committee
House minority leader Kevin McCarthy’s claimed it
would be illegal for telecom companies to comply with the investigation’s
records requests.
Hugo
Lowellin Washington
Mon 6 Sep
2021 07.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/sep/06/republicans-6-january-investigation-intimidation
Top
Republicans under scrutiny for their role in the events of 6 January have
embarked on a campaign of threats and intimidation to thwart a
Democratic-controlled congressional panel that is scrutinizing the Capitol
attack and opening an expanded investigation into Donald Trump.
The chairman
of the House select committee into the violent assault on the Capitol, Bennie
Thompson, in recent days demanded an array of Trump executive branch records
related to the insurrection, as members and counsel prepared to examine what
Trump knew of efforts to stop the certification of Joe Biden’s election win.
House
select committee investigators then asked a slew of technology companies to
preserve the social media records of hundreds of people connected to the
Capitol attack, including far-right House Republicans who sought to overturn
the results of the 2020 election.
The select
committee said that its investigators were merely “gathering facts, not
alleging wrongdoing by any individual” as they pursued the records in what
amounted to the most aggressive moves taken by the panel since it launched
proceedings in July.
But the
twin actions, which threatened to open a full accounting of Trump’s moves in
the days and weeks before the joint session of Congress on 6 January, has
unnerved top House Republicans, according to a source familiar with the matter.
The House
minority leader, Kevin McCarthy, decried the select committee’s investigation
as a partisan exercise and threatened to retaliate against any
telecommunications company that complied with the records requests.
“A
Republican majority will not forget,” he warned, in remarks that seemed to
imply some future threat against the sector.
The warning
from the top Republican in the House amounted to a serious escalation as he
seeks to undermine a forensic examination of the attack perpetrated by Trump
supporters and domestic violent extremists that left five dead and nearly 140
injured.
But his
remarks – which members on the select committee privately consider to be at
best, harassment, and at worst, obstruction of justice – reflects McCarthy’s
realization that he could himself be in the crosshairs of the committee, the
source said.
Most of
McCarthy’s efforts to undercut the inquiry to date, such as sinking the
prospects of a 9/11-style commission to scrutinize the Capitol attack, have
been aimed at shielding Trump and his party from what the select committee
might uncover.
But deeply
alarmed at the efforts by House select committee investigators to secure his
personal communications records for the fraught moments leading up to and
during the Capitol attack, McCarthy went on the offensive to pre-emptively
protect himself, the source said.
McCarthy
was among several House Republicans who desperately begged Trump to call off
the rioters as they stormed the Capitol in his name, only to be rebuffed by
Trump, who questioned why McCarthy wasn’t doing more to overturn the election.
Thompson
previously told the Guardian in an interview that such conversations with Trump
would be investigated by the select committee, raising the prospect that
McCarthy could be forced to testify about what Trump appeared to be thinking
and doing on 6 January.
The statement
from McCarthy asserted, without citing any law, that it would be illegal for
the technology companies to comply with the records requests – even though
congressional investigators have obtained phone and communications records in
the past.
The threat
is unlikely to be viewed as a violation of federal witness tampering law,
which, as part of a broader obstruction of justice statute, makes it a felony
under some circumstances to try to dissuade or hinder cooperation with an
official proceeding.
Congressman
Jamie Raskin, a member of the select committee and the former lead impeachment
manager in Trump’s second trial, said that he was appalled by McCarthy’s
remarks, which he described as tantamount to obstruction of justice.
“He is
leveling threats against people cooperating with a congressional
investigation,” Raskin said. “Why would the minority leader of the House of
Representatives not be interested in our ability to get all of the facts in
relation to the January 6th attack?”
Meanwhile,
other members on the select committee have also seized on McCarthy’s threat as
a reminder that Republicans could not be trusted to engage in the inquiry in
good faith, according to a source connected to the 6 January investigation.
It also
underscored to them, the source said, the nervousness among top Republicans as
the select committee ramps up its work, even though the inquiry is still in its
early days and has yet to sift through thousands of pages of expected evidence.
Emboldened
by McCarthy’s combative stance, Trump denounced the select committee as a
“partisan sham”, while Republicans under scrutiny by the panel such as Marjorie
Taylor Greene threatened any companies that complied with the records requests
would be “shut down”.
The
chairman of the House Freedom Caucus, Andy Biggs, is now also asking McCarthy
to remove from the Republican conference Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger – the
two vocal critics of Trump appointed to the select committee – whom he called
“spies” for Democrats.
Biggs on
Thursday suggested in a letter, first reported by CNN, that Cheney and
Kinzinger should be ejected because they are involved in investigating
Republicans over 6 January and the party should be able to strategize without
having the pair present at conference meetings.
Still,
McCarthy remains unable to shape an investigation likely to prove politically
damaging to Trump and to Republicans at the ballot box at the midterms next
year, a reality that has come largely as a result of his own strategic
miscalculations.
The proposed
9/11-style commission into the Capitol attack had envisioned a panel with equal
power between Democrats and Republicans, and McCarthy’s decision to boycott the
select committee in a flash of anger inadvertently left Trump without any
defenders.

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