Jan. 6 committee releases nearly 50 more witness transcripts — including Ivanka Trump, Bill Barr, and Mike Pompeo — to little fanfare
- The January 6 committee released a new trove of nearly 50 witness transcripts on Friday.
- The document dump comes one day after the panel published its final report on the Capitol attack.
The House select committee investigating the January 6, 2021 Capitol riot released a new trove of witness deposition transcripts on Friday evening, even as most lawmakers had already departed Washington, DC, ahead of the holiday weekend.
The document dump comes one day after the nine-member panel published its final report detailing the deadly Capitol riot and former President Donald Trump's role in it.
Testimony from several high-profile witnesses were included in the Friday release, including Ivanka Trump, former Attorney General Bill Bar, and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
Ivanka Trump's testimony detailed the efforts she made with her father the day of the riot to condemn the violence. Often, her efforts were at the request of other White House staffers, and in once case, Sen. Susan Collins, who called the first daughter to urge her father to do more, per her testimony.
The committee released testimony transcripts from 46 witnesses in total on Friday, having already published several transcripts earlier in the week. Testimony from Trump-aligned attorney Sidney Powell, former White House Counsel Pat Cipollone, and former White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany was also released Friday.
The release of the full report comes in just under the wire as the 117th Congress wraps up. But the timing of the document dumps has led to little fanfare given the proximity of the holiday weekend.
The Friday publications come four days after the panel held its final public hearing on Monday, during which they referred Trump to the Justice Department on four criminal charges, including obstruction and inciting an insurrection.
Rep. Bennie Thompson, the panel's chairman, said earlier this week that the committee will continue to release non-sensitive witness interviews through the end of the year before the panel dissolves ahead of the new Congress.
Pompeo opposed the idea of post-January 6 Cabinet meeting to pressure Trump into resigning
Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told the Jauary 6 committee that he did not support Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia's proposal of summoning the Cabinet together to admonish President Donald Trump.
"I remember — maybe this is a fine line — I remember thinking it would not be productive," Pompeo testified to the panel, according to a transcript of his deposition that was released Friday night.
An unnamed committee lawyer said that Scalia recalled Pompeo telling him sarcastically, "Can you imagine how the conversation will go?"
Pompeo told the panel that he could only recall that he opposed such an idea as it was extremely unlikely Trump would resign. Scalia also told the committee that Pompeo advised such a meeting could backfire, possibly enraging Trump further.
Pompeo testified that such a comment was not consistent with his memory.
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