Easing some of the escalating tension between Congress and the White House, the House intelligence committee postponed efforts to enforce a subpoena against the Justice Department on Wednesday after reaching an agreement with Attorney General William Barr over a cache of documents related to special counsel Robert Mueller’s Trump-Russia report.
The agreement came a day after the department said it would be willing to provide documents from Mueller’s investigation — but only if the committee withdrew it’s threats to Barr.
The panel had been expected to vote at Wednesday’s meeting — now postponed — on an unspecified “enforcement action” against Barr or the department after they refused to hand over an unredacted version of Mueller’s report and other documents related to the Russia probe.
Democrats have accused President Donald Trump and Barr of trying to stonewall and block their oversight duties. A separate House panel voted earlier this month to hold Barr in contempt after he failed to comply with a similar subpoena.
Barr and Trump have said the Democrats are using their judicial powers to play political theater. Barr has gone above and beyond what he is legally required to provide, the White House points out, but Democrats continue to accuse him of hiding unspecified information.
The Justice Department will begin turning over 12 categories of “counterintelligence and foreign intelligence materials as part of an initial rolling production,” and that process should be completed by the end of next week, Rep. Adam Schiff, the intelligence committee’s chairman, said in a statement.
Schiff, a California Democrat, warned that the subpoena would remain in effect and “will be enforced should the Department fail to comply with the full document request.”
Assistant Attorney General Stephen Boyd told Schiff in a letter Tuesday that the Justice Department would be willing to make less-redacted portions of the report available to members of the committee and that officials were reviewing troves of investigative documents that were also requested by the committee.
“We appreciate the continued dialogue with the Committee and look forward to working toward appropriately accommodating their requests,” department spokeswoman Kerri Kupec said Wednesday.
The Associated Press contributed to this article