The written report of Special Counsel Robert Hur about his investigation of President Joe Biden was released recently. Today, Hur testified for six hours about his report of Biden’s mishandling of classified documents from his eight years as vice president and 36 years in the Senate.” After his vice presidency ended in early 2009. However, Hur declined to bring charges because he doubted a jury would convict Biden because of his “diminished faculties in advancing age,” including a failing memory.
As
usual, Democrats and Republicans differed in their reaction to the testimony.
Democrats were angry that Biden’s memory issues are in the report. Republicans
were annoyed that the report does not recommend criminally charging Biden for
mishandling classified information. This fact did not sit well with Republicans
because of the way that former President Donald Trump was charged with keeping
classified documents after he left the White House. Fred Lucas at The Daily
Signal has “eight big takeaways from the hearing.”
1. President ‘Put Memory Squarely at Issue.’
Hur said he didn’t “sanitize” his report
on Biden nor did he “disparage” the president, as he fended off repeated
assertions from committee Democrats that he was partisan, a registered
Republican, and Trump’s appointee as U.S. attorney for Maryland.
“The evidence – and the president himself –
put his memory squarely at issue. We interviewed the president and asked him
about his recorded statement [to his ghostwriter], ‘I just found all the
classified stuff downstairs,’” Hur testified. “He told us he didn’t remember
that. He also said he didn’t remember finding classified material in his home
after his vice presidency. And he didn’t remember how any classified materials about
Afghanistan made their way into his garage.” …
2. ‘8 Million Reasons’
House Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan,
R-Ohio, talked about Biden’s five decades in federal elective office and how he
should know the rules and law on classified information.
“Why did Joe Biden, in your words, ‘willfully
retain and disclose classified materials?’” Jordan asked the special counsel.
Hur replied: “The conclusion as to exactly
why the president did what he did is not one we explicitly addressed in the
report.”
Jordan disagreed, saying, “I think you
told us, Mr. Hur,” then read from Hur’s report.
“President Biden had strong motivations to
ignore the proper procedures for safeguarding the classified information in his
new book,” Jordan read out loud.
“Why did he have strong motivations?
Because he decided months before leaving office to write a book,” the Ohio
Republican said. “Joe Biden had 8 million reasons to break the rules. Took
classified information and shared it with the guy who was writing the book. He
knew the rules but he broke them for $8 million in a book advance.” …
3. Report ‘Did Not Exonerate’ Biden
Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., asked Hur
about Biden: “In this case, did you reach a conclusion that this man was
outright innocent?”
“That conclusion is not reflected in my
report,” Hur replied.
In a follow-up question, Issa asked: “You
did not reach an idea that he committed no wrong. You reached a conclusion that
you would not prevail at a trial, and therefore did not take it forward. Is
that correct?”
Hur responded: “Correct, Congressman.”
Hur made a similar point later when Rep.
Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., said that “this lengthy, expensive, and independent
investigation resulted in a complete exoneration of Joe Biden.”
Jayapal went on to talk about other
issues.
Hur said, “I would take note of a word
that you used, ‘exoneration.’ That’s not part of my task as a prosecutor.”
During crosstalk, Jayapal said, “You
exonerated him.”
Hur replied: “I did not exonerate him.”
Several other Democrats insisted that Hur’s
report exonerated the president.
During another exchange, Rep. Kevin Kiley,
R-Calif., asked, “So a reasonable juror could have voted to convict based on
the facts that you presented?”
Hur responded, “Correct.”
4. Gaetz: Biden’s ‘Elevator Doesn’t Go to
Top Floor.’
Several Republicans on the committee asked
whether, had Biden been younger, the special counsel would have reached a
different conclusion about criminal charges. Hur declined to speculate.
Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., more bluntly,
said Biden got off on a senility defense. “You find in your report that the
elements of a federal criminal violation are met, but then you apply this ‘senile
cooperator’ theory that because Joe Biden cooperated and the elevator doesn’t
go to the top floor, you don’t think you can get a conviction,” Gaetz told Hur.
“I actually think you got to the right answer. I don’t think Biden should have
been charged. I don’t think Trump should have been charged.”
Hur disagreed on one point.
“One of the elements of the mishandling
statute is the intent element,” the special counsel said. “What my report
reflects is that, based on the evidence, I would not be able to prove beyond a
reasonable doubt to a jury that intent element.”
5. White House Pressure to Change Report
Under questioning, Hur said the White
House sought to change and edit his final report on the president before it
went public.
“Did the White House get the report before
the report was made public?” Jordan asked.
Hur cautiously responded.
“We did provide a draft of the report to
the White House counsel’s office and members of the president’s personal
counsel team for their review,” Hur said.
Jordan followed by asking: “Once they got
the report, before it went public, did the White House try to weigh in with
your investigation on elements of that report and, frankly, get that report
changed?”
Hur responded: “They did request certain
edits and changes to the draft report.” …
6. ‘Any Reason to Believe That President
Biden Lied to You?”
Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., ranking member
of the Judiciary Committee, noted that Trump has been charged with trying to
obstruct the FBI’s investigation into classified documents stored at his
Florida estate.
“At any point in your investigation, do you
have any reason to believe that President Biden lied to you?” Nadler asked,
then seemed to be surprised by the answer he got from Hur….
“I do address in my report one response
the president gave to a question we posed to him that we deemed to be not
credible,” Hur said….
Later in the hearing, Gaetz, the Florida
Republican, asked more about the matter, reading aloud from the transcript in
which a federal prosecutor questions Biden.
“Mr. President, why did you share
classified information with your ghostwriter?” the lawyer on the special
counsel’s team asks.
The president answers: “I did not share
classified information…. I guarantee I did not.”
“That’s not true, is it, Mr. Hur?” Gaetz
asked.
“That is inconsistent with the evidence of
the findings in my report,” Hur responded.
Gaetz followed by asking: “It’s a lie is
what regular people would say, right?”
Hur smiled, but didn’t answer directly.
Gaetz read again from the transcript,
quoting Biden as saying: “All the stuff that was in my home was in filing
cabinets that were locked or able to be locked.”
“That wasn’t true either, was it?” Gaetz
said.
Hur replied: “That was inconsistent with
the findings of our investigation.”
“Another lie, people might say,” Gaetz
said.
7. Schiff vs. Hur
Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., who was
removed from the House Intelligence Committee for making unfounded statements
about Russia, attacked Hur for including information in his report about Biden’s
memory.
Schiff accused Hur of being partisan and
said he would be “naïve” to think Republicans wouldn’t use the report against
Biden in the 2024 presidential campaign.
“What you did write was deeply prejudicial to the interests of the president,” Schiff said.
“You must have understood the
impact of your words.” …
Hur said he wasn’t going to make political
considerations.
“What you are suggesting is that I shape,
sanitize, omit portions of my reasoning and explanation to the attorney general
for political reasons,” Hur said.
8. Raskin vs. Spartz
During the hearing, Rep. Jamie Raskin,
D-Md., said this matter and House investigations of Biden are only about
getting Trump reelected, which Raskin suggested would end democracy.
“This is a memory test, but it’s not a
memory test for President Biden. It’s a memory test for all of America,” Raskin
… said….
Later in the hearing, Rep. Victoria
Spartz, R-Ind., who grew up in Ukraine when it was under Soviet control, took
exception to Raskin’s trivializing comments on communism.
“Mr. Raskin mentioned about us not
remembering communism – I actually grew up under communism, and I have a very
good recollection of what it is,” Spartz said.
“Unfortunately, it appears on the march
and on the rise, as you said,” she noted.
“Unfortunately, they’ve been involved with
President [Barack] Obama and now President Biden too. Unfortunately, our
government’s Department of Justice really now resembles a tyrannical
government. It is aid for me to see that.”
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