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Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen uses chicken statue, bucket of KFC to poke fun at Attorney General Barr's refusal to appear at House hearing

John Haltiwanger   

Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen uses chicken statue, bucket of KFC to poke fun at Attorney General Barr's refusal to appear at House hearing
Politics3 min read

steve cohen

Jim Watson/Getty Images

Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen bites into a piece of KFC fried chicken in an attempt to poke fun at Attorney General William Barr, who refused to attend a Thursday hearing in the House on the Mueller report

  • Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen poked fun at Attorney General William Barr with a bucket of KFC chicken and a statue of a chicken.
  • Cohen appeared to be suggesting Barr is a "chicken" for not showing up to a House Judiciary Committee hearing on the Mueller report. 
  • The Justice Department on Wednesday informed the committee Barr would not be coming to the hearing after roughly a week of terse exchanges with Democrats over the terms of his testimony. 
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen on Thursday brought a bucket of KFC chicken and a small statue of a chicken to a House Judiciary Committee hearing in an attempt to mock Attorney General William Barr for refusing to show up and testify on special counsel Robert Mueller's report. 

Cohen was seemingly suggesting that Barr was too "chicken" to come and face questions about his handling of the Mueller report's release. 

On Wednesday, the Department of Justice notified the House Judiciary Committee that Barr would not be coming to testify the next day over a disagreement about Democrats' plan to bring staff attorneys to question him. The two sies has been debating the format of the hearing for more than a week.

Read more: AG William Barr is refusing to testify before the House Judiciary Committee, daring Democrats to subpoena him

"Congress and the Executive branch are co-equal branches of government, and each have a constitutional obligation to respect and accommodate one another's legitimate interests," Justice Department spokesperson Kerri Kupec said in a statement released Wednesday evening.

The Justice Department also informed the House Judiciary Committee that Barr would not comply with a subpoena to issue a full, unredacted version of Mueller's report. 

House Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler signaled he could move to hold Barr in contempt of Congress if he does not deliver the unredacted report in the next few days. 

Read more:Barr went to incredible lengths to argue why a key interaction between Trump and Don McGahn was not obstruction

The back-and-forth with the House came after Barr on Wednesday appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee to testify on Mueller's report on the Russia probe, and faced a grilling from Democratic senators about the release of the probe's finding.

The attorney general released a redacted version of the Mueller report two weeks ago and has faced sharp criticism from Democrats on how he handled the rollout. The pushback from Democrats intensified after the release on Tuesday of a letter from Mueller to Barr objecting to the Attorney General's description of the special counsel's findings prior to the release of the full report.

 

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