Former Trump adviser Navarro refuses subpoena in U.S. House coronavirus
probe
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[December 13, 2021]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former White
House trade adviser Peter Navarro has refused to comply with a subpoena
for documents related to the Trump administration's response to the
coronavirus, saying the former president ordered him not to, according
to his response to a congressional request released on Saturday.
The subpoena was issued in November by the House Select Subcommittee on
the Coronavirus Crisis as part of its probe of whether former Trump
administration officials mishandled the federal response to the pandemic
by interfering with its own health agency's work. Nearly 800,000 people
have died in the United States from the pandemic.
Navarro, a Republican, also served as one of former President Donald
Trump's pandemic response advisers and was responsible for procurement
in the coronavirus response, among other things. Navarro said in a
letter to the subcommittee he would not cooperate because Trump told him
to "protect executive privilege."
"It is a direct order that I should not comply with the subpoena,"
Navarro said in a letter to the committee, a copy of which was seen by
Reuters.
Representative James Clyburn, a Democrat and chairman of the coronavirus
crisis panel, said in a letter to Navarro that he had no valid basis for
refusing to comply and that he had waived any privilege by writing about
conversations with Trump on the coronavirus response.
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White House advisor Peter Navarro leaves the West Wing carrying a
poster board displaying claims of voting irregularity at the White
House in Washington, U.S., January 15, 2021. REUTERS/Erin Scott/File
Photo
The refusal is "particularly indefensible given that you disclosed
many details about your work in the White House, including details
of conversations with the former President about the pandemic
response, in your recent book and related press tour," Clyburn said
in the letter.
Navarro could not be immediately reached for a response to Clyburn's
letter.
Clyburn said the subcommittee expects Navarro to produce all records
and information in his possession and appear for a deposition on
Dec. 15, as the subpoena requires.
Clyburn said when the subpoena was issued that "rather than
implement a coordinated national strategy to alleviate critical
supply shortages, Mr. Navarro and other Trump Administration
officials pushed responsibility to the states and pursued a
haphazard and ineffective approach to procurement -- contributing to
severe shortages of critically needed supplies and putting American
lives at risk."
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici and Timothy Gardner; Editing by Dan
Grebler)
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