[Congressional Record Volume 165, Number 39 (Tuesday, March 5, 2019)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1654-S1655]
NOMINATION OBJECTION
Mr. GRASSLEY. Madam President, I intend to object to any unanimous
consent request relating to the nomination of William R. Evanina to be
Director of the National Counterintelligence and Security Center,
PN192.
When I noticed my intention to place a hold on this nominee back in
June of 2018, I made it very clear to the public and to the
administration my reasons for doing so, and I put my statement of those
reasons in the Record. I have done that consistently, not only since
the rules of the Senate require every Member to do that, but even
before that rule was ever put in place.
I continue to experience difficulties obtaining relevant documents
and briefings from the Justice Department and the Office of the
Director of National Intelligence, ODNI, related to 2016 election
controversies. On several occasions, Deputy Attorney General, DAG, Rod
Rosenstein has personally assured me that the Senate Judiciary
Committee would receive equal access to information provided to the
House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, HPSCI, with regard to
any concessions in its negotiations regarding pending subpoenas from
that committee. However, I and the Judiciary Committee have not
received equal access.
For example, on August 7, 2018, I wrote to the Justice Department and
pointed out that the House Intelligence Committee had received
documents related to Bruce Ohr that we had not received. The Department
initially denied those records had been provided to the House
Intelligence Committee. After my staff confronted the Department, we
eventually received some Bruce Ohr documents. In that 2018 letter I
have referred to, I asked for documents based on my equal access
agreement with Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein, and I have not
received a response to date.
I have since learned that the Justice Department has taken the
position that Director Coats has prohibited them from sharing the
requested records with the committee.
In addition to the records request, in May 2018, the Director of
National Intelligence and the Justice Department provided a briefing in
connection with a pending House Intel subpoena to which no Senate
Judiciary Committee member was invited.
Thus far, the committee's attempts to schedule an equivalent briefing
have been ignored.
The administration's continued, ongoing, and blatant lack of
cooperation has forced my hand. I must object to any consideration of
this nomination.
In the authorizing resolution that created the Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence, SSCI, the Senate explicitly reserves for
other standing committees, such as the Senate Judiciary Committee,
independent authority to ``study and review any intelligence or
intelligence-related activity'' and ``to obtain full and prompt access
to the product of the intelligence and intelligence-related activities
of a department or agency,'' when such a
[[Page S1655]]
matter ``directly affects a matter otherwise within the jurisdiction of
that committee,'' S. Res. 400. As I understand it, the information at
issue here falls into that category.
Thus, unfortunately, I must object to any consideration of this
nomination. My objection is not intended to question the credentials of
Mr. Evanina in any way. This objection falls squarely on the
administration's continued failure to uphold their end of the
agreement. The executive branch must recognize that it has an ongoing
obligation to respond to congressional inquiries in a timely and
reasonable manner.
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