The Daily - Coordination: Not Established. Obstruction: More Complicated.
Episode Date: March 25, 2019Attorney General William P. Barr sent a letter to Congress summarizing the Mueller report: The special counsel investigation did not establish coordination with Russia, but there was a more complicate...d story when it came to obstruction of justice. Guests: The Times reporters Maggie Haberman, who covers the White House; and Michael S. Schmidt, who has been covering the special counsel investigation. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.
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Hello? Hello? Hello?
Hello.
Maggie?
Hi.
Can you hear me?
Yes, can you hear me?
Yeah, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on.
Wearing two headphones right now.
Sounds about right.
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We gotcha. We're just waiting on the star.
It's Michael Barbaro, host of The Daily.
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, Attorney General William Barr has sent a letter to Congress summarizing the findings of the special counsel investigation.
No coordination with Russia.
More complicated,
on obstruction of justice.
My colleagues Maggie Haberman
and Mike Schmidt explain.
It's Monday, March 25th.
Okay, Maggie, Mike, it is 6 p.m. on Sunday evening.
Two hours ago, the Attorney General, Bill Barr,
sent a letter to congressional leaders
outlining the major conclusions of the special counsel's report.
The report is broken into two parts.
The first one is on the biggest, most central question that has surrounded
the president since he was elected. What are the ties between his campaign and Russia? And on that
issue, Barr is unequivocal. What does he say? He says there are no ties between what Russia did in the election and Trump's campaign.
That despite how aggressively the Russians tried to interfere in our election and even outreach that they made to the campaign, they were able to find no evidence that they actually worked together.
actually work together. But Mike, help me understand this. In the lead up to the report,
the Mueller investigation issued a number of subpoenas and charges that felt like they revealed forms of collusion. I'm thinking about Papadopoulos, Manafort, a meeting inside Trump
Tower that involved the president's son and his son-in-law. Those all felt like forms of collusion.
I think that what went on was that the Trump campaign
was sort of collusion curious
in the sense that they were open
to sort of talking to anyone about anything.
And the Russians were reaching out.
And that meant that there were a lot of odd contacts that occurred.
What I think Mueller and Barr are saying
is that even though a lot of that stuff looks funky,
we have no evidence that they linked hands
and tried to work together to hurt Clinton.
So collusion curious does not equal coordination.
No. Being interested in getting information is something that you have heard either the president say
or people around the president say, you know, of course we took these meetings.
Of course when people reached out to us, we listened to them.
Who wouldn't?
Their argument has been that they were just doing what anyone would do.
And the other argument they've made repeatedly is that they were too discombobulated and too green and too new at this to even know how to collude.
And as someone who covered that campaign, I can tell you there is some logic to that argument. As somebody who's slightly more removed from the day-to-day of this investigation than either of you, it's starting to
feel, from this summary from Bill
Barr of the Mueller report, that
what the investigation
found was what we all kind of knew
the investigation found as it
was finding. That there was nothing
all that big being held back.
And that helps us understand
this conclusion. What we saw
in indictments either of Paul Manafort or of his deputy, Rick Gates, who pleaded guilty, or of Mike Flynn or George Papadopoulos, this might have been, it seems, all there was.
This was all the information that they were able to prove existed.
Mike, what do you think of that?
Let's go back and look at the indictments and guilty pleas.
Let's go back and look at the indictments and guilty pleas. George Papadopoulos, a campaign official who had contacts with individuals who said the Russians were going to be releasing information about Hillary Clinton's emails before it came out. When George Papadopoulos pleads guilty, he does not plead guilty to conspiring with the Russians. He pleads guilty to making false statements to investigators about that contact. The president's former national security advisor, Michael Flynn, has these odd phone calls with the Russian ambassador during the transition in which they discuss lifting sanctions that have just been imposed by the Obama administration for election meddling.
that have just been imposed by the Obama administration for election meddling.
When Mike Flynn goes into court to plead guilty,
he doesn't plead guilty to conspiring with the Russians.
He pleads guilty to making false statements to the FBI about it. So as we went along in the investigation over the past 22 months,
we never saw charges that said that the campaign conspired with Russia. There was some
question. Was Mueller holding out something like that until the end? Was he going to wait and then
make a move on it? Well, today we know that they never found anything. Right. He wasn't making
those kinds of indictments because he didn't have any evidence of it. Or at least he didn't have
enough to bring up an indictment.
I mean, he might have found strains of information.
He might have found pieces along the way, but it clearly was not enough to bring a charge.
So in the end, this was a bunch of people around the president lying, perhaps to avoid what might look like coordination if they were going to tell the truth, but not actually
coordinating according to the legal definition.
Correct.
And what about the second question in this letter, the question of obstruction of justice? What does Barr's
summary of the Mueller report say about that? So the obstruction part is not nearly as clean cut
as the collusion section. On obstruction, Barr essentially says that Mueller did not come to his own determination
on whether the president obstructed justice, that Mueller could not indict or exonerate the
president for that charge. But that left the door open for Barr to say, look, Mueller has not made
a determination on this. I, as the Attorney General,
along with the Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, will make that call. And we do not
believe there is a case to be made that President obstructed justice. I don't quite understand
what's going on here. Why do we think, Mike, that Mueller declined to weigh in on this question of obstruction of justice? Why leave it kind of up in the air?
sort of this paragon of justice and someone who was willing and able to go out and make determinations and calls on really tough issues in nonpartisan, follow-the-facts ways.
And here we have Mueller essentially saying, I don't really have a determination on it.
For each of the relevant actions, the letter says
that were investigated, the report sets out evidence on both sides of the question and leaves
unresolved what the special counsel views as, quote, difficult issues of law and fact concerning
whether the president's actions and intent could be viewed as obstruction. The special counsel states that, quote,
while this report does not conclude the president committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.
Let's pick apart what I think we can all agree is the most salient example of this, where maybe
disentangling motive and law and obstruction of justice is really tangled up. And that would
be the firing of James Comey. The president at first says it's not about Russia, then goes on
television, says it really is about Russia. And yet we all know that the president can pretty
much fire anyone at that level if he wants to. Is that what Bill Barr, in summarizing
Mueller, is saying? That this stuff is just really difficult, and so we're not making a call.
Mueller is saying this is really difficult, and it's hard to get in the president's head and know what his intent was and his frame of mind was.
And he decides that he is not going to be the one to make that call.
Bill Barr, not wanting, I think, to leave this as an open-ended thing, puts a pin in it and says this is done. And says, I will make that call. Bill Barr, not wanting, I think, to leave this as an open-ended thing, puts a pin in it and
says, this is done. And says, I will make that call. I will make that call. And we do not believe
that this is sufficient to say that the president obstructed justice. And remember, obstruction of
justice was key to Richard Nixon. This was a piece that the president's folks were worried about.
They had felt really confident the whole time that there would not be an
evidence-based case of conspiracy related to Russia, but they were concerned about what it
would find on the obstruction piece. Interestingly, and I still don't think this issue has gotten
enough attention, the central question here was the president's intent when he took actions like firing Comey.
But at the end of the day, the president of the United States never sat for an interview with investigators to answer those questions.
So here you have the attorney general saying,
this thing is done, but we've never heard from Donald Trump on it.
And the reason we never heard from Donald Trump on it. And the reason we never heard from Donald Trump on it was that his lawyers were so afraid
that if he sat down to answer questions,
he would make a factually inaccurate statement
and would increase his criminal exposure.
And it's within the president's rights
not to sit down for such an interview.
That's not true.
The Justice Department could have subpoenaed him
for an interview.
But why didn't they?
It's one of the unanswered questions of this.
But in an investigation where the central question was,
what was the president's intent,
Bob Mueller was never able to ask him that question.
But he wasn't able to ask him that question because he never issued a subpoena.
He never pursued all legal avenues?
We don't know whether he pursued a legal avenue
and was told that there wasn't sufficient anything to go get a subpoena,
or whether he just didn't seek one.
And that is, to me right now, as we sit here in open question,
I don't know whether Bob Mueller actually sought to go after the subpoena,
which a lot of people thought that he would do.
We're not going to know for some time.
But what we did learn on Friday, when Barr first announced the end of the Mueller investigation was there was no instance in the investigation where Mueller wanted to take a major step, like indict someone or subpoena them or get a search warrant in which he was told by his superiors at the Justice Department that he could not do that.
at the Justice Department that he could not do that.
So that would sort of bolster the argument that Mueller was not stopped by the Justice Department
from seeking a subpoena to interview the president.
He's saying there were no instances in which Mueller was stopped
from moving forward with something he wanted to do.
No matter what, in this moment where so much of this second question
of obstruction of justice
comes down to
the president's motivation,
which is essentially
a matter of getting
into someone's head,
never hearing
from President Trump
feels very significant.
It's a huge deal.
Barr lays it out
in this letter to Congress
about what Mueller's thinking was,
where he describes that the report sets out evidence on both sides of the question.
And I think what you have there is the president's lawyers have repeatedly offered up
explanations for why the president could have been doing something that were not necessarily
nefarious or that were not undermining. And the main thing that they have said over and over is this isn't obstruction because it's all playing out in public. It's
not hidden. He has a right to express his views as a citizen of the country. And I anticipate that,
you know, should we ever see what is in this report, that is going to show up a lot.
When Maggie and I would talk to Rudy Giuliani during the investigation,
he would say things like obstruction of justice and trying to interfere in an investigation
is going into a dark alley and threatening to break someone's leg if they cooperate with
investigators. It's bribing someone to not testify.
But what Giuliani said is that all this stuff is happening out in the open.
He's not trying to twist anyone's arm.
He's just blowing off steam about the investigation.
And what conspiracy is there in that?
Were either of you surprised
by either of these actions outlined in this letter
when it comes to obstruction of justice?
By Mueller declining to make a call or by Barr being so quick to make a call?
I was not surprised that Mueller didn't make a call. I was surprised that Barr moved so quickly.
I did not think that the collusion aspect of this letter was going to be revelatory,
but I did think that the obstruction one possibly would be. And it shuts it down definitively.
There's a piece
of the letter that we haven't talked about, which is that Bill Barr, the Attorney General, tells
Congress that Robert Mueller, the special counsel, recognized that, quote, the evidence does not
establish that the president was involved in an underlying crime related to Russian election
interference, and that while not determinative, the absence of such evidence
bears upon the president's intent
with respect to obstruction.
So a big piece of the thinking for Barr
seems to have been that
since there is not an underlying crime
that was found related to the president,
that obstruction is harder to prove.
In other words,
there is a connection between these two questions,
between coordination
and obstruction of justice, that if there was no coordination, if there is no original
sin, then it's hard to establish that there was obstruction of justice.
Right.
If there is no crime that was committed, it is hard to suggest that the president was
trying to obstruct justice in the course of pursuing evidence about that crime.
And that is an argument that Mike and I also heard the president's lawyers say repeatedly,
which was that there couldn't be obstruction of justice because there's nothing to obstruct.
Does that seem like universally sound legal logic that you can't commit a crime in obstructing investigations into something that wasn't a crime? Because
it certainly feels like if someone's investigating me and I decide to stop the investigation in
violation of the law, that that could be itself a violation of a law separate and apart from whether
or not what I was being investigated for in the first place was a crime. I mean, are those two
things necessarily connected? I think there's two reasons why the Justice Department would not want to bring a case like this. The first is,
is that if there's not an underlying crime, then do you really want to bring an obstruction case?
Do you really want to go to court to try and convince a jury that someone took actions where
there was nothing to cover up? I jury that someone took actions where there was nothing
to cover up. I think that's a tough case to make. The second thing is that while the president
huffed and puffed a lot about this investigation, I'm not sure how much real damage it did to it.
Bob Mueller was able to pursue his inquiry. He was not fired. They finished what they had.
inquiry. He was not fired. They finished what they had. They weren't impeded by the Justice Department. So what was the real damage? If the president was obstructing, how did he really
hurt the investigation? Give me the damage report. And I don't think at the end of the day, there was
that much that actually hurt Mueller's team's ability to do their job. It may have been loud,
it may have been annoying, it may have been dispiriting, but I think they were able to
pursue what they needed to. I think also there's a third point, which is that I think that Bob
Mueller was very mindful that he was dealing with the presidency and the damage that an ongoing case like this, if it was iffy and not lock
solid, not completely nailed down, could cause not just the office of the presidency, but
the kind of trauma that brings to a country.
I'm very struck as we're talking, Maggie and Mike, that, at least according to this letter,
this is exactly what we have had in front of us all along.
Unless the report has a lot of information that we're not seeing,
what we saw play out publicly is what was there.
The attorney general made clear that this investigation was ending
without a recommendation of more indictments. That includes sealed indictments. This is what we're getting. It will now move to Capitol Hill, and Democrats will seek to get as much material as they can. But in terms of the part the president was really concerned about, in terms of Mueller, that is over.
That is over.
So let's talk about what Congress is going to do now.
Congressional leaders have just received this letter.
Mike, you have told us in the past that Democrats were going to be very cautious in how they proceeded under any circumstances.
And that if Mueller didn't find the sort of thing that would force even Republicans in Congress to acknowledge that the president had violated the law, impeachment proceedings would be very unlikely.
And it seems like this letter is not at all what Democrats would have needed to move forward in that sort of way.
I think it takes a lot of wind out of their sails.
They basically have full-blown investigations into obstruction and collusion going on.
And here you have Mueller,
someone who has far better tools
than they will ever have to investigate,
coming out and clearing the president
on the Russia issue
and giving a mixed message on obstruction
that allows Barr to clear him there.
It gives the Republicans a very good argument to say, why are you guys continuing to look at these
issues? Why are you continuing to rummage around in the president's life when we've received clarity
on this from the Justice Department? So I think it hurts them.
I think that you're going to see Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic House Speaker, proceed carefully.
As of late evening Sunday, she still had not said anything about how she was going to handle this.
And I think that you are going to see a lot of Republicans reminding Democrats that they
were holding Robert Mueller up as this avatar of credibility
when the investigation was going on, so that it is hard to now say, we need to know more because
we need to make a determination that he couldn't. That will almost inevitably look very political.
So the Democrats are going to ask for everything that Mueller had in the report. And it's clear from the letter
that a lot of obstruction of justice issues
were looked at and detailed and analyzed.
And the question is,
is that if the Democrats get their hands on that,
how damaging is the obstruction stuff?
And is it strong enough to give Democrats more of an oomph on their obstruction investigation?
Is it both of your understandings that Congress will get a full copy of the Mueller report that they can then examine for these answers?
I don't think that's been resolved yet.
That's the big question.
We'll be right back.
Maggie, after months of the president
calling the Mueller investigation
a witch hunt, or worse, would it be better now for him to lean into that description or turn around and say, you know, this investigation is the gold star of investigations and it says I people in the White House who are encouraging the president to turn and say, this was a highly respected prosecutor who was a hoax. And that is what I have heard a number
of his advisors say publicly in the last few hours. It's what his son said in a statement
that he gave me. I think they are going to go full on by telling people this was a waste of two years.
This was an effort to undo an electoral result in 2016 and don't let this happen again.
And I wonder if you can explain to listeners why it wasn't what you just said the president
might call it, a waste of two years, a waste of everyone's time and an effort
to politically undermine him.
It might have had the effect of undermining him. That might have been one of the impacts. But
we do know, based on numerous assessments from the intelligence community, that Russians did seek to interfere in the 2016 election.
We do know that there were many contacts between Russians and people involved in the Trump campaign.
So trying to find out what was at the heart of that, one would think, was not a waste of time.
And now there is an answer.
There is a world in which the president could say, this gave me a clean bill of health, and now you can trust me going forward.
Mike, I want to ask you the same question. What is your explanation for why this investigation
was not a waste of time? Well, there were legitimate issues and questions that had to be
answered. And along the way, the president took action after action
that only made the perception that he did something wrong worse. He fired the FBI director.
He asked the FBI director to end an investigation into whether his former national security advisor
was talking improperly to the Russian ambassador. He said things publicly
about the investigation time and time again that demonized the investigators. He criticized his own
attorney general who recused himself from the Russia investigation. He called Mueller's team
a bunch of angry Democrats. He made the perception worse. And there were things that he did that walked up to the line of obstruction
and had to be looked at, that had to be sorted through,
whether it was to clear the president and say,
hey, look, he did nothing wrong for his sake,
or to give the public some confidence
that the president of the United States
was not a Russian agent.
So among the questions that had to be
answered in an investigation into Russian interference in our election, regardless of the
answer, was what was the president's role in this? And it happens to be that the answer was seemingly
nothing illegal, but that answer had to be unearthed. A significant portion of the country
thought that the president of the United States,
either wittingly or unwittingly,
had worked with a foreign adversary
to influence the election.
That was something that had to be looked into.
And because he didn't do that,
Bill Barr also believes
he did not obstruct this investigation.
There was nothing to obstruct.
At least that's what they found.
No one asked me, but...
Michael, what do you think?
I think that Russia could never have fathomed
just how cosmically disruptive
their efforts to influence the election would be.
I think they succeeded beyond their wildest dreams, yes.
Look at how distracted we've been as a country
because of this for the past
two years. Think about all the other issues that we could have been talking about or looking at.
This was an enormous, enormous distraction for the country.
And for Donald Trump.
Maggie, Mike, thank you very much.
Thank you.
Thanks for having us.
Thank you.
Thanks for having us.
So after a long look, after a long investigation, after so many people have been so badly hurt,
after not looking at the other side, where a lot of bad things happened, a lot of horrible things happened, a lot of very bad things happened for our country.
It was just announced there was no collusion with Russia, the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard. On Sunday afternoon, on his way back to Washington from his home in Florida,
President Trump addressed the major findings of the Mueller report.
There was no obstruction and none whatsoever. And it was a complete and total exoneration.
It's a shame that our country had to go through this.
To be honest, it's a shame that your president has had to go through this for before I even
got elected.
It began and it began illegally.
And hopefully somebody is going to look at the other side.
This was an illegal takedown that failed. And hopefully somebody's going to be
looking at the other side. So it's complete. Not long after, the Democratic chairman of the
House Judiciary Committee, Representative Jerry Nadler of New York, disputed the president's
characterization of the Mueller report during a news conference in New York. Earlier today, I received a four-page letter from Attorney General Barr
outlining his summary of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report
while making a few questionable legal arguments of his own.
I take from this letter three points.
First, President Trump is wrong. This report does not amount to a
so-called total exoneration.
Nadler seemed to accept Mueller's conclusion that the president did not coordinate with
Russia, but seized on less definitive statements made by Mueller and Barr about whether the
president obstructed justice.
The attorney general's comments make it clear that Congress must step in to get the truth
and provide full transparency to the American people.
The president has not been exonerated by the special counsel,
yet the attorney general has decided not to go further
or apparently to share those findings with the public.
We cannot simply rely on what
may be a hasty, partisan interpretation of the facts.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.