Attorney General Jeff Sessions will face questions about the
firing of FBI Director James Comey and undeclared meetings with Russian
officials at a U.S. Senate hearing on Tuesday.
Although it was unclear whether Sessions would testify in
public or in private.
Sessions, an early and ardent supporter of U.S. President
Donald Trump’s 2016 election campaign, would be the highest government official
to testify before the Senate intelligence committee in its probe of allegations
that Russia may have sought to interfere in the election.
Democratic Senate leader Chuck Schumer and fellow Democratic
Senator Jack Reed were questioned on Sunday.
They were questioned why Sessions was involved in Trump’s
May 9 dismissal of Comey after he had refused himself from investigations of
whether Russia meddled in the election, possibly with help from Trump
associates.
“There’s a real question of the propriety of the attorney
general participating in that in any way, shape or form,” Reed said.
Russia has denied interfering in the U.S. election.
The White House has also denied any collusion with Moscow.
Sessions said in a letter on Saturday that he would appear
before the committee to address matters that Comey brought up last week in
testimony to the same panel.
He did not say if he would appear in open or closed session.
Democrats are pushing for a public hearing.
Democratic Senator Ron Wyden, an intelligence committee
member, had asked the panel’s leaders in a letter on Sunday to hold an open
hearing.
A Justice Department official said that the department
expected Sessions to testify in closed session but later stressed that the
decision was up to the panel’s Republican chairman, Senator Richard Burr.
Justice Department spokesperson Sarah Flores said she did
not know if it would be public.
“That is a question for the committee.”
Republican Senator James Lankford, a member of the
intelligence panel, told CBS’ “Face the Nation” the decision was not finalised,
but “I assume that this will be public.”
Sessions is skipping a separate hearing on Tuesday on the
Justice Department’s budget and sending his deputy for the session that will be
open to the public.
Sen. Patrick Leahy, the Senate appropriations committee’s
top Democrat and a member of the Senate judiciary committee, tartly reminded
Sessions that both oversee his department.
“You need to testify before both in public.
“You can’t run forever,” Leahy said.
Media reports last week said Sessions offered to resign
because of tensions with the president over his decision to recuse himself from
the FBI’s Russia probe.
Comey accused the Republican president of trying to get him
to drop the investigation of former national security adviser Michael Flynn and
fired him to undermine the Russia probe.
Trump himself attributed his dismissal of Comey to the
Russia investigation.
Comey’s testimony on Thursday also raised new questions
about the attorney general’s relationship with Russian officials with ties to
President Vladimir Putin.
One is whether Sessions had any undisclosed meetings with
Ambassador Sergei Kislyak or other Russians during the campaign or after Trump
took office.
Sessions in March removed himself from involvement in any
probe into alleged Russian election meddling but maintained he did nothing
wrong by failing to disclose that he met last year with Russia’s ambassador.
Comey’s dramatic testimony drew invective from his former
boss on Twitter, with Trump dismissing him as a leaker on Friday and a coward
on Sunday.
“I believe the James Comey leaks will be far more prevalent
than anyone ever thought possible.
“Totally illegal, very ‘cowardly,’” Trump tweeted on Sunday.
The president denied trying to interfere with the
investigation and said he would be willing to testify under oath about his
interactions with Comey.
“We have to keep in mind that this is one person’s record of
what happened.
“The only two people who know what happened in those meetings
are the president and James Comey,” Republican National Committee Chairpertson
Ronna McDaniel said.
Schumer invited Trump to testify under oath before the
Senate and he urged Trump to produce any tapes of his conversations with Comey.
“If there aren’t tapes, he should let that be known. No more
game playing,” Schumer said.
Trump alluded to tapes in a May tweet.
Comey welcomed any tapes during his hearing, and
congressional investigators have asked the White House to produce them if they
exist.
Trump’s tendency to bring up the Russia investigation,
whether by insulting Comey or hinting at the existence of tapes, has created a
headache for Republicans who want to focus on the party’s priorities such as
healthcare and tax reform.
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham on Sunday accused Trump of
getting in the way of his own agenda.
“You may be the first president in history to go down
because you can’t stop inappropriately talking about an investigation that if
you just were quiet, would clear you,” Graham said.
(Source: Reuters/NAN)
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