[Congressional Record Volume 165, Number 51 (Monday, March 25, 2019)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1927-S1928]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Unanimous Consent Request--H. Con. Res. 24
Madam President, now on another matter, last night, Attorney General
Barr delivered a brief letter to Congress that included his summary of
Special Counsel Mueller's investigation. We have all seen the Attorney
General's letter, but none of us--neither the Congress nor the public--
have seen the report itself. The Justice Department has declined to
even say how many pages the report includes, as if that were some sort
of State secret.
After all, let's not forget why we are here in the first place. Two
years ago, a hostile power attacked our democracy. As Mr. Barr's letter
says, Russian actors, with the backing of Mr. Putin, waged a
sophisticated and malicious campaign of disinformation and falsehood in
order to influence the outcome of our elections. That has never
happened before.
The American people deserve to see the documentation. What did they
do? Whom did they approach? What happened? To sweep an issue like this
under the rug, when the security of our wellspring elections--fair and
not interfered with by foreign power--is at stake?
It is overwhelmingly self-evident in the public interest for the
Mueller report to be released to the people. The American people simply
want the truth. Each American, if he or she chooses, could read the
report for themselves and draw their own conclusions. Whether or not
you are a supporter of President Trump, whatever you feel, there is no
good reason not to make the report public.
On March 14, just prior to the recess, the House of Representatives
surprised a lot of our Republicans friends here in the Senate by
passing a resolution calling for the report to be made public. Guess
what the vote was. It was 420 to nothing. Even the most vociferous
defenders of President Trump--Mr. Meadows and Mr. Jordan--voted yes.
When the resolution arrived here in the Senate, I asked unanimous
consent that it be adopted. I thought it would be. Regrettably, one
Senator objected. The Senator from South Carolina--my friend, Senator
Graham--said he wouldn't agree to the resolution unless it was amended
to call for a special prosecutor to investigate Hillary Clinton. The
Senate was unable to pass the resolution that passed the House
unanimously without controversy.
In fact, President Trump had said, even before the report came out
and repeatedly afterward several times, that he supported passage of
the House resolution and he supports making it public, and so did a
good number of my Republican colleagues--a whole bunch today.
So, in a moment, I am going to renew my request of March 14 that the
Senate
[[Page S1928]]
adopt H. Con. Res. 24, calling for public release of the Mueller
report. Now that President Trump supports public release of the report,
there is no good reason for anyone to object to this request.
It is a simple request for transparency, nothing more, nothing less--
not to make a decision as to what you believe, not to say what we ought
to do about it, but just to make it public. Transparency is a great
American virtue that we have tried to uphold through the centuries.
So I hope I will not hear a request from the other side to amend the
resolution to call for a different special counsel investigation. If
there is going to be an objection, the American people deserve to know
why--why should this report not be made public--not why something else
shouldn't be done, not some extraneous issue. Why shouldn't this report
be made public?
I ask my friend, the leader--I see him rising, and I imagine he is
going to object--to give a reason why this report should not be made
public, not that something else should be done at the same time. This
is serious stuff. If there is an objection raised, it will only serve
to frustrate the compelling public interest that is made in the special
counsel's report in making it public.
Therefore, I will now give the Senate another opportunity to join
every one of their colleagues in calling for the public release of this
important report.
Madam President, as if in legislative session, I ask unanimous
consent that the Senate proceed to the immediate consideration of H.
Con. Res. 24, expressing the sense of Congress that the report of
Special Counsel Mueller should be made available to the public and to
Congress, which is at the desk; further, that the concurrent resolution
be agreed to, the preamble be agreed to, and the motions to reconsider
be considered made and laid upon the table with no intervening action
or debate.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Boozman). Is there objection?
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, as I
said just a few moments ago, it is certainly good news for the country
that the special counsel concluded that there is no evidence that the
Trump campaign collaborated or conspired with the Russian Government to
influence the last Presidential election. It is also good news for the
country that due to the special counsel's work, we now have more
insight into Russia's efforts to interfere with our democratic
institution.
Now, I have consistently supported the proposition that the special
counsel should be allowed to finish his work without interference. The
work of the special counsel, however, is not yet complete. Neither is
the work of the Department of Justice. The Attorney General told us
yesterday that he is working with the special counsel to determine how
much of the special counsel's report can be produced without violating
the law and without jeopardizing other ongoing matters, including other
matters initiated by the special counsel. The special counsel and the
Justice Department ought to be allowed to finish their work in a
professional manner.
Now, my good friend, the Democratic leader, was all for allowing the
special counsel to conduct his work without political interference when
it might be politically advantageous to him, but, apparently, my friend
from New York is not for allowing the special counsel to complete his
work with the Justice Department, according to his best professional
and legal judgment, when that might be inconvenient to my friend's own
current political purposes.
To date, the Attorney General has followed through on his commitment
to the Congress. One of those commitments is that he intends to release
as much information as possible. I certainly welcome that commitment to
transparency, as do others, but to the extent that the Attorney
General, in consulting with the special counsel, believes it is
important to protect sensitive sources and methods, protect material
that could affect ongoing investigations and prosecutions, and is
legally protected, then he deserves the time to work through these
issues.
I am going to object in order to allow the special counsel and the
Justice Department to finish their careful and professional review of
a, no doubt, voluminous record--a record that likely contains
sensitive, classified, and legally protected material.
For all of those reasons, I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
The minority leader is recognized.
Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, I will be brief. The resolution does not
say it has to be done immediately. The resolution certainly allows for
the Attorney General to make sure that nothing is released that
violates the law. All it says is that it ought to be released. It is
hard to understand why the majority leader wouldn't be for that
resolution.
None of his objections--none--are in the words of the report. In
fact, the words of the report are very simple. It shows a sense of the
Congress that it should be released--not when, not in violation of the
law, not in a hurried matter, just to be released.
So I am sort of befuddled by at least the majority leader's reasoning
in this regard because it is not in the words of this resolution.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, the country and the President had to
wait 2 years. It has been going on for 2 years. This very expensive
investigation took 2 years to be concluded. Look, it is not
unreasonable to give the special counsel and the Justice Department
just a little time to complete their review in a professional and
responsible manner.
Remember, as I said earlier, we are likely dealing here with other
potential prosecutions, classified information, and damaging people's
reputations. There is no evidence that the Attorney General is not
going to produce as much information as possible for all of us, and
that is why I objected.
I think it is a reasonable thing to do. We have been waiting for a
long time for this report to wrap up. It is largely good news, not just
for the President but for the country.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The minority leader is recognized.
Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, again, this language was good enough for
every Republican in the Senate, as well as every Democrat. The
President himself says it should be released. It is hard to understand
why the majority leader should stand alone in objections no one else
found to be reasonable or sustainable and oppose this resolution. The
report should be made public, and the Senate should resolve that it
should be.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Michigan is recognized.