The top Democrats on the House and Senate foreign affairs committees launched an investigation Saturday into President Trump‘s Friday night firing of State Department Inspector General (IG) Steve Linick.
Rep. Eliot Engel, the chair of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, and Sen. Bob Menendez, the lead Democrat on the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, wrote letters to the White House, State Department and the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) to preserve all records related Linick’s dismissal and turn the information over by Friday, May 22.
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“President Trump’s unprecedented removal of Inspector General Linick is only his latest sacking of an inspector general, our government’s key independent watchdogs, from a federal agency. We unalterably oppose the politically-motivated firing of inspectors general and the President’s gutting of these critical positions,” Engel and Menendez wrote in the letter to the White House.
The lawmakers suggest that the firing was politically motivated and “may be an illegal act of retaliation.”
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“Reports indicate that Secretary [of State Mike] Pompeo personally made the recommendation to fire Mr. Linick, and it is our understanding that he did so because the Inspector General had opened an investigation into wrongdoing by Secretary Pompeo himself,” the lawmakers write. “Such an action, transparently designed to protect Secretary Pompeo from personal accountability, would undermine the foundation of our democratic institutions and may be an illegal act of retaliation.”
Pompeo recommended to Trump that he fire Linick, a State Department official told Fox News on Saturday.
Trump fired Linick on Friday night, saying in a letter to Congress that he no longer had confidence in the State Department IG — who was appointed during the Obama administration and had overseen reports critical of the department’s policies since Trump took office.
The revelation that Pompeo requested Linick be fired will almost certainly increase those concerns from Democrats.
Fox News learned in October 2019 that Linick had hosted a closed-door briefing on the Ukraine investigation for congressional committee aides that examined communications between Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani and fired Ukrainian prosecutor Viktor Shokin and current Prosecutor-General Yuriy Lutsenko.
Before that, his office had raised concerns about then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server.
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Linick’s removal continues a series of changes among the government’s inspectors general. The most notable of which was Trump’s April firing of then-Inspector General for the Intelligence Community Michael Atkinson for his role in the whistleblower complaint that led the Ukraine probe — and Trump’s subsequent impeachment.
Linick will be replaced by Stephen Akard, a former career foreign service officer with close ties to Vice President Pence, a Trump administration official told The Associated Press.
The Democrats are not only seeking documents and communications related to Linick’s ousting but also to the qualifications of Akard and information on all the pending IG investigations Linick’s office was working on before his untimely ouster.
Democrats have panned Trump’s purge of inspector generals as a way for the president to avoid accountability, and they sought to strengthen their protections in newly passed legislation.
“This concern is amplified by the fact that [the firing] came only hours after the House of Representatives passed the Heroes Act, which contains additional legal protections for inspectors general,” Engel and Menendez said.
Fox News’ Rich Edson, Adam Shaw and Dom Calicchio contributed to this report.