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Whistle-blower willing to answer questions from House GOP, attorney says

An attorney for the whistleblower said Republicans on the House Intelligence Committee could submit questions directly to his client instead of going through the panel’s Democratic majority.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy.
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy.Read morePablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

An attorney for the whistle-blower who filed a complaint about President Donald Trump’s apparent efforts to pressure Ukraine for information he could use against political rivals said Sunday that Republicans on the House Intelligence Committee could submit questions directly to his client instead of going through the panel’s Democratic majority.

Mark Zaid confirmed his client’s offer to the top Republican on the Intelligence Committee, Rep. Devin Nunes of California, to answer written questions under oath and with penalty of perjury, while also protecting the individual’s identity. In recent days, Trump and his allies have ramped up efforts to expose the whistle-blower’s identity, amplifying theories regarding the person’s motives.

Questions "cannot seek identifying info, regarding which we will not provide, or otherwise be inappropriate," Zaid tweeted, adding that the offer reflects his client's desire to be seen as nonpartisan. "We stand ready to cooperate and ensure facts — rather than partisanship — dictates any process involving the #whistle-blower."

The whistle-blower's attorneys previously notified both the House and Senate intelligence committees that their client was willing to respond to questions in writing and under oath "in a bipartisan manner." By offering a direct channel to Republicans, the whistle-blower's team has sought to quell grumbling by GOP leadership — and the president — that the impeachment process has been secretive and unfair.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., appearing on CBS News' "Face the Nation," which first reported about the offer for the written testimony, rejected that as insufficient for such a critical moment as impeaching a president.

"I think that the whistle-blower should come forward in an open hearing," McCarthy said, suggesting that the whistle-blower should also identify the White House officials whom he cited in his complaint as criticizing Trump's actions. "He needs to answer the questions, we need an openness that people understand this."

McCarthy again raised a GOP talking point, saying that the impeachment process is flawed, even though Republicans' previous objections — that the inquiry had not been formally voted on — were dealt with Thursday with a vote to set up formal impeachment procedures.

"There's no transparency," said McCarthy, who spent Saturday night with Trump at New York's Madison Square Garden for a mixed-martial arts fight.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., mocked McCarthy's complaints, saying that the GOP leader had neither the facts nor the law on his side and so was just "pounding the table."

Nunes' office did not respond to a request for comment, and it remains unclear whether Republicans have accepted the whistle-blower's offer.

Democrats, who initially considered the whistle-blower central to their investigation, now see no need for the individual's testimony, citing ample evidence from senior administration officials that support the whistle-blower's claims. Nearly a dozen witnesses, in addition to the call notes released by the White House of the July 25 phone conversation between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, have corroborated the whistle-blower's complaint. Several officials have testified that they expressed concerns to the National Security Council's attorneys that the call was inappropriate, despite Trump's claims otherwise.

Trump maintained Sunday that the whistle-blower "should be revealed," insisting to reporters that his phone call with Zelensky was "totally appropriate." Earlier in the morning, the president tweeted the baseless allegation that the individual is "an arm of the Democrat party."

McCarthy, on "Face the Nation," echoed Trump's claims and demanded that Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., and his staff be called to testify when asked which witnesses Republicans want to bring before the committee. The House minority leader leveled several accusations against Schiff that have been rejected by Zaid, specifically that the committee chairman met with the whistle-blower earlier and might have helped him draft the complaint.

Asked whether he was serious about having Schiff testify before his own committee, McCarthy said, "Yes, I would, because he is the only person who knows who this whistle-blower is." Zaid has repeatedly said that his client never met Schiff and met with only one committee staffer a few months ago, who suggested that he see a lawyer and file a formal complaint.

A crucial week lies ahead for Democratic investigators before the public phase of the impeachment inquiry commences, with the list of witnesses potentially corroborating the whistle-blower’s testimony growing substantially. House Democrats have summoned former national security adviser John Bolton to testify — the senior-most Trump aide called to testify thus far.

Fiona Hill, a former top Russia adviser at the White House, testified this month that Bolton, who was her direct superior, was incensed over Trump personal attorney Rudy Giuliani’s politically motivated activities in Ukraine. Bolton likened Giuliani to a “hand grenade who’s going to blow everybody up,” according to an official familiar with Hill’s testimony.