House Panel Subpoenas Bannon in Russia Probe Showdown

WASHINGTON (AP) โ€” Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon on Tuesday refused to answer a broad array of queries from the House Intelligence Committee about his time working for President Donald Trump, provoking a subpoena from the panelโ€™s Republican chairman.

The development brought to the forefront questions about White House efforts to control what the former adviser tells Congress about his time in Trumpโ€™s inner circle โ€” and whether Republicans on Capitol Hill would force the issue.

The congressional subpoena came the same day The New York Times reported that Bannon โ€” a former far-right media executive and recently scorned political adversary of the presidentโ€™s โ€” has been subpoenaed by special counsel Robert Mueller to testify before a federal grand jury.

With the issuance of Muellerโ€™s subpoena, Bannon became the highest-ranking person who served in the Trump White House to be called before a grand jury as part of the special counselโ€™s investigation.

By itself, the move doesnโ€™t confirm that Mueller is presenting evidence to support future criminal charges. But it does show that Mueller is still actively using a grand jury as he probes the actions of Trump, his family and his staff during the campaign, the presidential transition and the early months of the administration.

Congressional officials declined to say whether Bannon disclosed Muellerโ€™s subpoena during an all-day, closed-door interview with members of the House Intelligence Committee.

The members grilled Bannon as part of the committeeโ€™s investigation into Russian election inference. Lawmakers also wanted answers about Trumpโ€™s thinking when he fired FBI Director James Comey.

But Bannon refused to answer questions about that crucial period, prompting the committeeโ€™s chairman, Rep. Devin Nunes of California, to issue the subpoena, said Nunes spokesman Jack Langer.

Late Tuesday, Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the top Democrat on the committee, said Bannonโ€™s refusal to answer those questions came at the instruction of the White House.

โ€œThis was effectively a gag order by the White House,โ€ Schiff said shortly after Bannonโ€™s interview concluded. Schiff said the committee plans to call Bannon back for a second interview.

A spokeswoman for Bannon did not respond to multiple requests for comment Tuesday afternoon.

At the White House, press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said โ€œno oneโ€ had encouraged Bannon not to be transparent during questioning but thereโ€™s a โ€œprocess of what that looks like.โ€

โ€œAs with all congressional inquiries touching upon the White House, Congress must consult with the White House prior to obtaining confidential material. This is part of a judicially recognized process that goes back decades,โ€ Sanders told reporters.

A White House official said the president did not seek to formally exert executive privilege over Bannon โ€” a move that would have barred him from answering certain questions. The official said the administration believes it doesnโ€™t have to invoke the privilege to keep Bannon from answering questions about his time in the White House. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations.

The House committee had planned to press Bannon on โ€œexecutive actionsโ€ taken by Trump that have drawn interest from congressional investigators prying into ties between Trumpโ€™s campaign and Russian operatives, said another person, who wasnโ€™t authorized to speak on the record about the closed-door session and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Those key elements bear directly on the criminal investigation led by Mueller, who is charged with investigating ties between the Trump campaign and Russia and whether the president obstructed justice by firing Comey or by taking other actions to thwart investigators.

The focus on Bannon follows his spectacular fall from power after being quoted in a book saying that he sees the presidentโ€™s son and others as engaging in โ€œtreasonousโ€ behavior for taking a meeting with Russians during the 2016 campaign.

In Michael Wolffโ€™s โ€œFire and Fury,โ€ Bannon accuses Donald Trump Jr., Jared Kushner and former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort of essentially betraying the nation by meeting with a group of Russian lawyers and lobbyists who they believed were ready to offer โ€œdirtโ€ on Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.

More recently, Bannon has said he was not referring to Trump Jr. but rather to Manafort. Wolff stands by his account.

After the bookโ€™s release, Trump quickly disavowed โ€œSloppy Steve Bannonโ€ and repeatedly argued there was no evidence of collusion between his presidential campaign and operatives tied to Russian President Vladimir Putin. Bannon apologized a few days later but was stripped of his job leading the pro-Trump website Breitbart News.

Bannon last year had largely avoided the scrutiny of congressional investigators, who instead focused much of their energy on trying to secure interviews with top witnesses like Manafort and former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

But Bannon played a critical role in the campaign, the presidential transition and the White House โ€” all now under scrutiny from congressional investigators.