The
 White House on Sunday brushed aside congressional Democrats’ concerns 
about Atty. Gen. William Barr being handed extraordinary powers to declassify sensitive intelligence as part of a probe into the origins of the investigation into Russian efforts to sway the 2016 election.
Reflecting
 his anger over unflattering depictions of his actions in the report by 
special counsel Robert S. Mueller III, including several episodes that 
might have constituted obstruction of justice, President Trump has 
authorized the attorney general to investigate the investigation. Trump 
and his allies have long insisted that the FBI improperly “spied” on his
 campaign.
Democrats already have accused Barr of trying to put the best possible face
 on Mueller’s findings and say they fear he will selectively release 
documents in an effort to undermine public confidence in the nation’s 
intelligence agencies and Mueller’s investigators.
Mueller’s report itself  documents activities during the 2016 presidential campaign that caught  the attention of U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies,  including information passed along by Australian officials concerning a  Trump campaign advisor, George Papadopoulos, who told an Australian  diplomat that Democratic emails had been stolen by the Russians before  the hacking of the Democratic National Committee’s computer system  became public knowledge.
Democrats already have accused Barr of trying to put the best possible face
 on Mueller’s findings and say they fear he will selectively release 
documents in an effort to undermine public confidence in the nation’s 
intelligence agencies and Mueller’s investigators.
Mueller’s report itself
 documents activities during the 2016 presidential campaign that caught 
the attention of U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies, 
including information passed along by Australian officials concerning a 
Trump campaign advisor, George Papadopoulos, who told an Australian 
diplomat that Democratic emails had been stolen by the Russians before 
the hacking of the Democratic National Committee’s computer system 
became public knowledge.
When
 Republicans had the majority in the House, Intelligence Committee 
Chairman Devin Nunes (R-Tulare) spent nearly two years investigating the
 same issues without producing evidence to back up Trump’s claims.
White
 House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders insisted Sunday that the 
administration is not prejudging Barr’s findings, but expressed 
confidence, without offering proof, that he would be able to document 
“outrageous” corruption at the FBI.
“I’m
 not going to get ahead of what the final conclusion is, but we already 
know that there was a high level of corruption that was taking place,” 
Sanders, in Tokyo with the president on a state visit to Japan, told NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
Questioned
 by host Chuck Todd about whether Barr could be trusted not to 
cherry-pick information, Sanders defended the decision to give Barr 
declassification powers that have traditionally been jealously guarded 
by intelligence agencies.
“That’s
 the reason that he’s granted the attorney general the authority to 
declassify that information – to look at all the documents necessary…so 
that we can get to the very bottom of what happened,” she said. “Once 
again, we already know about some wrongdoing.”
Congressional
 Democrats have sharply questioned whether the administration is acting 
in good faith. Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Burbank), who presently chairs the
 House Intelligence Committee, said the president’s decision, announced 
on the eve of the Memorial Day weekend, allowed Trump and Barr to 
“weaponize law enforcement and classified information against their 
political enemies.”
Trump allies denied that the president’s actions in any way undermined the core missions of the intelligence community.
“We’re not compromising national security here,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who has emerged as one of Trump’s staunchest congressional defenders.
 Graham, interviewed on “Fox News Sunday,” said that he believed Barr 
“can be trusted” not to manipulate information in the president’s favor.
“The
 people who are worried about this are worried about being exposed for 
taking the law into their own hands,” said Graham, who chairs the Senate
 Judiciary Committee.
Trump
 himself defended Barr’s review, saying before he left for Japan that it
 was not meant to avenge himself on political opponents.
“It’s
 not payback – I don’t care about payback,” he told reporters. “I think 
it’s very important for our country to find out what happened.”
The
 push by the White House to investigate those who investigated the 
president comes against the backdrop of across-the-board resistance by 
Trump to congressional oversight. At least a dozen separate battles are 
playing out over congressional subpoenas of documents and individuals on
 matters including the Mueller report and Trump’s tax returns.
House
 Speaker Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco so far has resisted calls by some
 Democratic lawmakers to open impeachment proceedings against the 
president, especially if he continues to reject Congress’ authority to 
carry out investigations of the president’s conduct and finances. She 
argues that impeachment remains premature, although she has accused Trump of a “cover-up.”
An early backer of impeachment, Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) said Sunday she believed that Pelosi eventually would relent.
“I
 think it’s moving toward that,” she said on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” 
adding that “the traditional congressional oversight process isn’t 
working.”
The
 chairman of the Democratic caucus, Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York, 
defended Pelosi’s go-slow approach, saying that for now, investigating 
Trump “methodically yet aggressively” was the best approach, while 
simultaneously working to advance the Democrats’ legislative agenda.
“Democrats
 can sing and dance at the same time, just like Beyonce,” he said on 
NBC. “We will not overreach. We will not over-investigate,” he added.
On
 the Republican side, however, there was increasing willingness to echo 
Trump’s call for drastic punishment of law enforcement figures who 
helped move the investigation forward.
Rep.
 Liz Cheney of Wyoming, interviewed on ABC’s “This Week,” said the 
origins of Mueller’s investigation were suspect because statements by 
FBI agents during the 2016 campaign sounded “a whole lot like a coup.”
She
 was referring in part to texts critical of Trump that were exchanged by
 two bureau officials, including former agent Peter Strzok, who was 
removed from the Mueller probe when the messages came to light and 
subsequently forced out, and lawyer Lisa Page, who has also left the 
FBI.
“It could well be treason,” Cheney said.
Cheney’s
 comments drew an irate riposte on Sunday from Preet Bharara, who was 
fired by Trump as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York. 
Legal experts have pointed out that the Constitution says treason consists of “levying war against” the United States or giving “aid and comfort” to its enemies.
“Elected
 officials keep making casual, ignorant, idiotic accusations of 
‘treason.’ … Just saw Liz Cheney do it,” Bharara wrote on Twitter. “Read
 the Constitution.”
[Los Angeles Times]