Republicans in Congress have joined the
White House in asking questions about the extent to which a Democratic
Party consultant may have worked with Ukrainian officials to hurt
then-candidate Donald Trump's presidential bid last year.
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley wrote a letter
earlier this week to the Justice Department asking whether the
Democratic National Committee broke the law. Grassley, R-Iowa,
specifically asked if the DOJ was investigating Alexandra Chalupa, a
Ukrainian-American DNC consultant who allegedly had meetings at the
Ukrainian Embassy in Washington, D.C., to discuss incriminating
information about Trump campaign officials.
President Trump, trying furiously to tamp down the controversy over
alleged Russian coordination with his associates, has questioned why the
same scrutiny is not being applied to the Democrats' alleged Ukraine
connection.
In a Tuesday tweet, he complained about the lack of an investigation
into Ukraine efforts to "sabotage" his campaign.
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Donald J. Trump ✔ @realDonaldTrump
Ukrainian efforts to sabotage Trump campaign - "quietly working to boost
Clinton." So where is the investigation A.G. @seanhannity
6:03 AM - 25 Jul 2017
Prying into such claims, Grassley's letter to Deputy Attorney General
Rod Rosenstein flagged the “deficient enforcement” of the Foreign Agents
Registration Act (FARA) and asked why the Justice Department did not
require Chalupa to register.
“Chalupa’s actions appear to show that she was simultaneously working on
behalf of a foreign government, Ukraine, and on behalf of the DNC and
Clinton campaign, in an effort to influence not only the U.S. voting
population but U.S. government officials,” Grassley wrote to Rosenstein,
claiming that if that were the case, Chalupa would have been required
under law to register under FARA.
FARA requires individuals to register with the Justice Department if
they act, even through an intermediary, “as an agent, representative,
employee or servant” or “in any other capacity” at the behest of a
foreign actor to engage with a U.S. official, according to Grassley’s
letter.
DEMOCRATS BLOCK KEY WITNESS AGAINST SHADOWY FIRM FUSION GPS
Grassley requested a response from Rosenstein by Aug. 3. The Justice
Department declined to comment on the matter. Grassley said it was
“imperative” that the Justice Department explain why Chalupa had not
been required to register.
But Chalupa’s attorney, Conrad Nowak of Hinshaw Culbertson, LLP told Fox
News that the law was “inapplicable” to Chalupa’s actions.
“When discussing the actions of Alexandra Chalupa, the spirit and letter
of FARA could not be more inapplicable. In contrast, Mr. Manafort, we
must remember, was in fact directly working for a foreign entity for
enormous sums of money,” Nowak said, referring to former Trump campaign
manager Paul Manafort. “Chalupa was nothing more than an individual
involved in ethnic relations, not unlike countless other ethnic and
heritage communities throughout the United States.”
Chalupa, who has since left the DNC, worked as a part-time consultant,
primarily in ethnic-American outreach.
Her attorney blamed the “attack” over her activities and the “attempt to
force them into FARA” as “nothing more than continued anti-immigrant,
anti-ethnic rhetoric.”
Nowak did, however, point out that FARA has “never had a successful
prosecution under its provisions,” and that it “exempts certain
cultural, social or academic activities.”
“It’s my belief that all of this is nothing more than misdirection from
the real issue and that is Russian intervention in our presidential
election, which it is important to point out, has been already proved
and supported by intelligence agencies,” Nowak said. “Believe me, if
there was anything to this Ukraine red herring, we would’ve heard about
it a long time ago.”
Chalupa was first brought into the conversation in January, after
Politico published a report exposing her as a DNC operative, who worked
in the Clinton White House and met with officials in the Ukrainian
Embassy in an effort to expose ties between Manafort and Russia.
Even before Trump tweeted on Tuesday, the White House was raising
questions about Democrats' ties to Ukraine. Press Secretary Sarah
Huckabee Sanders even suggested it could amount to "collusion" -- the
same charge critics level against the Trump team and Russia.
A DNC spokeswoman told Fox News the White House has been “pushing this
narrative” to “distract.”
“No one is buying it,” DNC Deputy Communications Director Adrienne
Watson told Fox News. “The Trump campaign embraced an offer from a
hostile foreign government to interfere in our elections. Trump and some
of his family watched for months as the Kremlin attacked our democracy,
and did nothing but encourage and celebrate their efforts.”
Watson added: “The FBI is investigating whether the Trump campaign was
involved in these efforts.”
But Grassley has applied scrutiny to both sides of the aisle. His
committee initially subpoenaed Manafort to appear in a public hearing
Wednesday to discuss the same issue – Foreign Agent Registration. The
committee then reached an arrangement with Manafort to avoid public
testimony for now.
Brooke Singman is a Reporter for Fox News. Follow her on Twitter at @brookefoxnews.
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