President Donald Trump's repeated public comments attacking the Justice Department have not influenced the department or ongoing investigations, Attorney General Jeff Sessions said Tuesday during a contentious House judiciary committee hearing.
Sessions said although his Justice Department will consider investigations into Hillary Clinton, he could not say whether he would recuse himself from the matter, contradicting his previous statements on the matter. He said there was not yet enough evidence of impropriety to merit assigning a new special counsel.
"You can have your idea but sometimes we have to study what the facts are and to evaluate whether it meets the standard that requires a special counsel," Sessions told Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio. "'Looks like' is not enough basis to appoint a special counsel," the attorney general later added.
Sessions on Moore: 'I have no reason to doubt these young women'
Sessions also testified that he now remembers a meeting with Trump campaign aide George Papadopoulos, whose work is now a focus of Robert Mueller's special counsel investigation into Russian election meddling, but denied having a clear memory of the full conversation.
The hearing comes after a year where Sessions has been under repeated pressure from the President to launch investigations into Clinton and has been under fire from congressional Democrats about his answers on Russia and push end the DACA program for undocumented immigrants brought to the United States as children, among other issues.
"A President cannot improperly influence an investigation," Sessions said. "And I have not been improperly influenced and would not be improperly influenced."
Sessions added, "The President speaks his mind. "He's bold and direct about what he says. The people elected him. But we do our duty every day based on the laws and fact."
Pressed by Democratic Rep. John Conyers, Sessions added, "The Department of Justice can never be used to retaliate politically against opponents, and that would be wrong."
DOJ, he added later "will not be infected by politics or bias."
"We intend to do our work according to the established principles of the Department of Justice. We will not be infected by politics or bias," he said. "We will make only decisions we believe are right or just and we will not sue the department to unlawfully advance a political agenda."
"I am determined that when the years go by that people will say this Department of Justice would not crumble, it stayed great and true," he added.
However, Sessions said he would not acknowledge if he will recuse himself from any probe regarding Clinton, despite earlier pledges to do just that given his high-profile role in the Trump campaign. The then-Alabama senator was the first US senator to back Trump.
"To announce recusal from any investigation would confirm the existence of that investigation, and top officials have advised me I should not do so," Sessions said.
In his confirmation hearing in January, Sessions had pledged to senators he would recuse himself from matters involving Clinton, given his involvement with the Trump campaign. In March, Sessions released a statement recusing himself. "I have decided to recuse myself from any existing or future investigations of any matters related in any way to the campaigns for President of the United States," he said.
Papadopoulos meeting
Sessions testified that he now remembers the meeting Papadopoulos, but his memory about conversations is limited.
"I do now recall the March 2016 meeting at Trump Hotel that Mr. Papadopoulos attended, but I have no clear recollection of the details of what he said at that meeting," Sessions said.
Sessions previously said he had "no recollection" of the meeting that he chaired that included Papadopoulos until a picture of it surfaced after the staffer's guilty plea for false statements.
"After reading his account, and to the best of my recollection, I believe that I wanted to make clear to him that he was not authorized to represent the campaign with the Russian government, or any other foreign government, for that matter. But I did not recall this event, which occurred 18 months before my testimony of a few weeks ago, and would gladly have reported it had I remembered it, because I pushed back against his suggestion."
But Sessions insisted he did not make any false statements in his previous congressional testimony or public statements.
"My answers have not changed," Sessions said. "I have always told the truth, and I have answered every question as I understood them and to the best of my recollection, as I will continue to do today. ... I will not accept and reject accusations that I have ever lied under oath. That is a lie."
Things grew heated with Sessions and New York Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, as Democrats repeatedly implied or accused Sessions of lying in previous testimony.
Jeffries noted all the times Sessions has testified he "did not recall" a fact, and referenced a speech Sessions gave on the Senate floor justifying his vote to impeach former President Bill Clinton. Sessions referenced a perjury case of a young police officer he prosecuted even though the officer corrected the record later.
"The attorney general of the United States of America should not be held to a different standard than the young police officer whose life you ruined for prosecuting him for perjury," Jeffries said.
Sessions grew angry in response, repeating that he had never lied under oath.
"Nobody, nobody, not you or anybody else, not me, should be accused of perjury for answering a question the way I did in this hearing," Sessions said. "You're accusing me of lying about it? I would say that's not fair, Mr. Jeffries."
Sessions has previously faced repeated questions from senators about his role in the campaign and the investigation into Russian meddling in the US election. After his confirmation hearing, it came to light that Sessions had met with Russian officials during the campaign, prompting his recusal from the investigation and leading to the special counsel's appointment. He then faced the Senate intelligence committee about the inconsistencies over the summer.
Last month, he faced the Senate judiciary committee for further questions about his changing story, with Democrats dismayed that Sessions continued to cite executive privilege in refusing to discuss any conversations with President Donald Trump.
Since that hearing, Mueller unsealed a guilty plea from a campaign foreign policy staffer, Papadopoulos, for false statements to the FBI. Sessions supervised the advisory group on which Papadopoulos sat and reportedly rejected his suggestion for Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin to meet.
'Not able to answer' dossier questions
Sessions repeatedly declined to answer questions related to the infamous dossier about Donald Trump prepared by retired British agent Christopher Steele, saying he would have to refer questions to the investigation by Mueller.
The dossier has been a focus of Republicans in Congress, who have been frustrated by the leak of the unverified allegations within it and have sought to link the research to Democrats.
The research came through an opposition firm, Fusion GPS, that was first paid by a conservative publication and later paid by Democrats.
"I'm not able to reveal internal investigatory matters," Sessions said.
"I'm not able to answer that," he repeated multiple times to Ohio Republican Rep. Jim Jordan as he asked about the dossier.
Investigating Uranium One
Sessions said DOJ would investigate any potential issues related to Clinton.
News broke Monday night that Sessions has asked senior federal prosecutors to "evaluate certain issues" presented by House Republicans, including alleged ties between the Clinton Foundation and the sale of Uranium One. The move, detailed in a letter to Judiciary Chairman Bob Goodlatte, comes after Trump has criticized his Justice Department for not doing more investigation of his former political rival.
"You can be sure that they will be done without political influence and they will be done correctly and properly," Sessions said at the hearing Tuesday.
The committee's top Democrat, Rep. John Conyers, criticized the move.
"Virtually every Clinton-related matter that President Trump complains about has been well-litigated, carefully examined and completely debunked," Conyers said. He added he hoped Sessions "can assure us that the Department is weathering near-daily attacks on its independent by President Trump -- and that no office of the Department is being used to pressure the President's political enemies."
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