Barr sets March 31 congressional testimony amid Roger Stone controversy

Barr sets March 31 congressional testimony amid Roger Stone controversyAttorney General William Barr is headed back to Congress. Barr is set to testify before the House Judiciary Committee next month, the committee announced Wednesday. In a letter, Democratic members of the committee say they plan to discuss concerns about "the misuse of our criminal justice system for political purposes."This comes a day after all four prosecutors involved in the Roger Stone case quit when the Department of Justice backed off its sentencing recommendation of seven to nine years for the longtime Trump adviser. On Wednesday, Trump congratulated Barr on Twitter "for taking charge" of the case, which Trump wrote "was totally out of control and perhaps should not have even been brought."Democrats on the Judiciary Committee in their letter write to Barr that he has "engaged in a pattern of conduct in legal matters relating to the president that raises significant concerns," also saying the events of this week "raise grave questions about your leadership." Politico's Kyle Cheney notes this will be Barr's first time testifying before the Judiciary Committee since his confirmation hearing. It's been, to say the least, an eventful year since then, and the committee in its letter teases this week's events "are not the only issues that our committee intends to discuss with you when you appear." Given that this testimony is nearly seven weeks away, the events discussed will presumably include at least some that haven't actually occurred yet. Barr is set to appear before the House Judiciary Committee on March 31. More stories from theweek.com Brokered convention gets close 2nd place in FiveThirtyEight's Democratic nomination forecast The Democratic establishment is out of time Trump says the lesson he learned from impeachment is that 'Democrats are crooked'


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Trump says the lesson he learned from impeachment is that 'Democrats are crooked'

Trump says the lesson he learned from impeachment is that 'Democrats are crooked'It turns out Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) was right — President Trump said he did, in fact, learn some lessons from his impeachment.Trump was asked Wednesday if he had any takeaways from the experience now that he's been acquitted and he certainly did, though his answer was probably not quite what Collins had in mind when she said she believed the process would prove to be a teachable moment for the commander-in-chief. The president said, first and foremost, he learned congressional Democrats are "crooked" and "vicious," and that they should not have "brought impeachment." So, not much in the way of self-reflection.> Trump said the only lessons he learned from being impeached is that "the Democrats are crooked" and "vicious," adding "they shouldn't have brought impeachment." He goes on to whine about NBC and MSNBC. pic.twitter.com/pG652ebLIX> > — Oliver Willis (@owillis) February 12, 2020Additionally, he said he learned his poll numbers jumped up, which he attributed to what he baselessly called the "dishonest" reporting of news outlets like NBC.Trump has repeated these claims many times throughout and even before his tenure in the Oval Office, though, so it's worth wondering whether he really gained this perspective because of impeachment.More stories from theweek.com Barr sets March 31 congressional testimony amid Roger Stone controversy Brokered convention gets close 2nd place in FiveThirtyEight's Democratic nomination forecast The Democratic establishment is out of time


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Ukrainian Political Shake-up Involves Figures in U.S. Impeachment

Ukrainian Political Shake-up Involves Figures in U.S. ImpeachmentMOSCOW -- Ukraine's president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, fired his chief of staff Tuesday in a personnel shake-up affecting central figures on the Ukrainian side of the events leading to the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump.The shuffle in Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital, offered fresh evidence of how deeply entangled Ukrainian and American politics have become.The new chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, negotiated last summer with Trump's personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, as Giuliani and Trump pressured Ukraine to start investigations that would benefit Trump politically. Yermak, who at the time was a senior presidential adviser on foreign policy, has sought to maintain good ties with the Trump administration.The man he replaced, Andriy Bohdan, a former lawyer for oligarch Ihor Kolomoisky, reportedly became chief of staff last year over Giuliani's objections. Giuliani was at odds with Kolomoisky at the time but later pivoted to working with Kolomoisky associates in his search for evidence against Trump's political enemies.Yet the shake-up appears to have more to do with Ukraine's internal workings -- specifically, a growing clash between Zelenskiy's administration and Kolomoisky, a billionaire with oil, television and real estate holdings who was implicated in a major banking scandal.Yermak's name popped up often in the House impeachment investigation. In talks and text message exchanges with him, Giuliani and U.S. diplomats sought an announcement of Ukrainian investigations, including one into former Vice President Joe Biden and his family, while withholding a White House visit and military assistance.Yermak later sought to smooth relations during the impeachment hearings. After Trump's ambassador to the European Union, Gordon Sondland, testified that he had told Yermak that military aid was "likely" linked to the announcement of investigations -- a key accusation in the Democrats' case -- Yermak told a journalist he didn't remember this part of the conversation. The comment bolstered Trump's defense."Yermak tries to present himself as a person who can negotiate with the Americans," Volodymyr Yermolenko, editor of Ukraine World magazine, said in a telephone interview, a stance that could help in his new role, he said, though Zelenskiy promoted him mostly for domestic reasons.Before running for office last year, Zelenskiy was a comedian starring in a television show on a station owned by Kolomoisky, and their relationship is seen as pivotal in Ukrainian politics. The president, who ran on an anti-corruption platform, has had to fend off allegations that he was a tool of the oligarch.Kolomoisky has annoyed officials in Zelenskiy's government by opposing a land reform measure and an agreement with the International Monetary Fund. The IMF deal promises to deliver billions of dollars in aid to Ukraine, though it harms Kolomoisky's business interests.His allies pushed back on social media, mocking supporters of the IMF deal and broad economic overhauls as "Sorosaty," a word derived from billionaire philanthropist George Soros' last name. In Ukrainian, it rhymes with piglet."Kolomoisky is a toxic figure in the West," Yermolenko said, and Zelenskiy seems to be inching toward easing his allies out of government.One sign of this conflict came into view this month, when agents of the domestic intelligence agency searched the office of a close ally of Kolomoisky, Oleksandr Dubinsky, in relation to a scandal involving electronic eavesdropping.Separately, Yermak and Bohdan, the Kolomoisky associate, were reportedly at odds over appointments to the Kyiv city administration. And some in the Zelenskiy team had grown dissatisfied with Bohdan's handling of reform legislation in Parliament, which has become bogged down, magazine Novoye Vremya reported.Though the reasons for sidelining Kolomoisky may be domestic, they could also resonate in American politics. Kolomoisky has been an on-again, off-again ally of Giuliani in his efforts in Ukraine.Last spring, they were at odds, and through an associate, Lev Parnas, Giuliani asked Zelenskiy to refrain from hiring Bohdan as chief of staff, according to Parnas' lawyer. Parnas later became a key figure in the impeachment inquiry.By December, Giuliani had swiveled to cooperating with the oligarch's allies in a continuing effort to gather information against Biden, who is running against Trump, and other Democrats.Among those whom Giuliani met on a trip to Kyiv for example, was Dubinsky, the Kolomoisky associate whose offices were later searched by the domestic intelligence agency. It was not clear whether that search and the firing of Bohdan indicated that those who had been aiding Giuliani were being pushed aside.On Monday, Attorney General William Barr said that the Justice Department would consider, but carefully vet, the information Giuliani was turning up in Ukraine and had established a channel for the president's lawyer to provide it to a U.S. attorney outside of Washington.This article originally appeared in The New York Times.(C) 2020 The New York Times Company


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White House tries to assure Congress over withheld money

White House tries to assure Congress over withheld moneyA key White House figure in delaying aid to Ukraine last year reassured lawmakers Wednesday that the Trump administration realizes it is required under the law to spend money approved by Congress. Acting budget director Russell Vought told the House Budget Committee that "we need to abide by the appropriation ... passed by Congress" when distributing agency dollars. Vought was at the center of the events last year that prompted Trump's impeachment.


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Warren Calls on Barr to ‘Resign or Face Impeachment’ over Intervention in Roger Stone Case

Warren Calls on Barr to ‘Resign or Face Impeachment’ over Intervention in Roger Stone CaseDemocratic presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren called on Wednesday for Attorney General William Barr to "resign or face impeachment" after the Justice Department pushed back on prosecutors' "excessive" sentencing recommendation for President Trump's longtime adviser Roger Stone."Congress must act immediately to rein in our lawless Attorney General," the Massachusetts senator wrote in a tweet. "Barr should resign or face impeachment."Warren also demanded that Congress use its funding powers to constrain the attorney general's ability to interfere with "anything that affects Trump, his friends, or his elections."After President Trump complained Tuesday on Twitter that the prosecutors seven-to-nine-year sentencing recommendation constituted a "horrible and very unfair situation," his Justice Department submitted a revised filing stating that the prosecutors' recommended lengthy sentence "could be considered excessive and unwarranted."Stone was convicted of lying to Congress, witness tampering and obstructing the House's investigation into the Trump campaign's connections to Russia. All four of the prosecutors who recommended Stone's seven to nine year sentence either resigned or quit the case after the DOJ weighed in.The White House denied Trump had pressured the DOJ to show lenience to Stone."He's the chief law enforcement officer. He has the right to do it. He just didn't," said Hogan Gidley, the White House principal deputy press secretary, saying Trump "did not interfere here with anything."Trump congratulated Barr later in the day for "taking charge of a case that was totally out of control and perhaps should not have even been brought."Warren noted that she has called for an independent Justice Department task force to investigate alleged crimes by Trump administration officials and called on all other Democratic candidates to commit to doing the same, "so Trump officials know they will be held accountable by career prosecutors once he is out of office.""Abusing official power to protect political friends and attack opponents is common in authoritarian regimes like Putin’s Russia," Warren said. "Trump and Barr’s conduct has no place in our democracy. To end it, Congress must act—and the American people must hold them accountable in November."


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Trump donor accused of spying on Yovanovitch hands 'everything' to Congress, reports say

Trump donor accused of spying on Yovanovitch hands 'everything' to Congress, reports sayA donor to Donald Trump who was accused of "stalking" the former ambassador to Ukraine at the behest of Rudy Giuliani's associates has provided documents to Congress as it opens its investigation into the ousting of Marie Yovanovitch, a crucial witness in the president's impeachment.The Daily Beast reports that Robert Hyde, a Republican congressional candidate from Connecticut, gave "everything" he had between himself and Lev Parnas, an associate of Rudy Giuliani who has been indicted for campaign finance violations involving foreign money.


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Lindsey Graham says Trump shouldn't have tweeted about Stone sentencing, but he won't call on Barr to testify about reversal

Lindsey Graham says Trump shouldn't have tweeted about Stone sentencing, but he won't call on Barr to testify about reversalSen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) wishes President Trump hadn't tweeted about the initial sentencing recommendation for his longtime adviser Roger Stone, but he doesn't seem overly concerned about the fallout.Graham on Wednesday said Trump should've restrained from posting about an ongoing case. "I've told him that," he said.Still, the chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee added he doesn't think the Justice Department's reversal of the original seven to nine year recommendation after Trump's public complaint is worth looking into. He said Attorney General William Barr won't be called in to testify about it, even though several prominent Democrats including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) and Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) have called for Barr to do just that.Sen. Elizabeth Warren, meanwhile, thinks Barr should either resign or be impeached for the Justice Department's conduct, let alone come in and testify before the Senate. > Congress must act immediately to rein in our lawless Attorney General. Barr should resign or face impeachment. And Congress should use spending power to defund the AG's authority to interfere with anything that affects Trump, his friends, or his elections.> > -- Elizabeth Warren (@ewarren) February 12, 2020More stories from theweek.com Can Mike Bloomberg buy ironic meme glory? Yes, he can. In Twitter rampage, Trump attacks federal judge set to sentence Roger Stone A Bernie Sanders presidency would be remarkably familiar


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