WASHINGTON — Two prime congressional Democrats opened an investigation on Saturday into President Trump’s removing of Steve A. Linick, who led the
WASHINGTON — Two prime congressional Democrats opened an investigation on Saturday into President Trump’s removing of Steve A. Linick, who led the workplace of the inspector common on the State Division, citing a sample of “politically-motivated firing of inspectors common.”
Mr. Trump instructed Speaker Nancy Pelosi late Friday evening that he was ousting Mr. Linick, who was named by President Barack Obama to the State Division put up, and changing him with an envoy with shut ties to Vice President Mike Pence within the newest purge of inspectors common whom Mr. Trump has deemed insufficiently loyal to his administration.
Mr. Engel and Mr. Menendez said in their letters that they believe Secretary of State Mike Pompeo recommended Mr. Linick’s ouster because he had opened an investigation into Mr. Pompeo’s conduct. The lawmakers did not provide any more details, but a Democratic aide said that Mr. Linick had been looking into whether Mr. Pompeo had misused a political appointee at the State Department to perform personal tasks for himself and his wife.
“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,” the lawmakers wrote.
Under law, the administration must notify Congress 30 days before formally terminating an inspector general. Mr. Linick is expected to leave his post then.
Mr. Trump’s decision to remove Mr. Linick is the latest in a series of ousters aimed at inspectors general who the president and his allies believe are opposed to his agenda.
Mr. Linick was spotlighted during the impeachment inquiry when he requested an urgent meeting with congressional staff members to give them copies of documents related to the State Department and Ukraine, signaling they could be relevant to the House investigation into whether President Trump pressured Ukraine to investigate former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and his son Hunter Biden. The documents — a record of contacts between Rudolph W. Giuliani, the president’s personal lawyer, and Ukrainian prosecutors, as well as accounts of Ukrainian law enforcement proceedings — turned out to be largely inconsequential.