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Kavanaugh's opponents protest ex-aide's role in screening of documents

WASHINGTON — The lawyer advising former President George W. Bush on the release of thousands of records relating to Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s time as an aide in the Bush White House once worked for him.

A team of roughly 50 lawyers is reviewing tens of thousands of pages of documents held by the Bush Library in Texas as part of an effort to determine which, if any, should be withheld from the Senate based on Bush’s assertion of “executive privilege” — his right to object to their release.

The documents relate to Kavanaugh’s time in the Bush White House counsel’s office, not his time as staff secretary. Burck is not screening the documents himself, but he is supervising the review and, according to a person familiar with the process, does advise the former president as he makes those decisions.

“What’s needed is a neutral and unbiased individual to review the documents,” said Nan Aron, founder and president of the Alliance for Justice, a liberal advocacy group. “That is not Bill Burck, whose loyalty lies with Brett Kavanaugh and the Bush administration.”

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During his long career in public service — as a lawyer working for Kenneth Starr, the independent counsel who investigated former President Bill Clinton, as an associate White House counsel to Bush and later as staff secretary from 2003 to 2006 — Kavanaugh has left an especially voluminous paper trail.

On Thursday, Burck wrote to Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, and enclosed what he described as an “initial production” of more than 125,000 pages of records from Kavanaugh’s stint as the associate White House counsel. Grassley had requested those records.

But Republicans have rebuffed Democrats’ repeated demands for access to emails and other records from the three years that Kavanaugh spent as staff secretary — a job that the judge himself has said was “the most interesting and informative for me” as preparation for his current role on the federal appeals court.

Grassley’s refusal to request the staff secretary records led Democrats to boycott the traditional “courtesy visits” with Kavanaugh for the past several weeks. But a senior Democratic aide said Friday the boycott was about to end; Sens. Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader, and Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., the ranking member on the Judiciary Committee, will meet with the judge this month, and others in the party are expected to follow suit.

Schumer and Feinstein intend to use their meetings with Kavanaugh “to demand the missing documents from him directly,” said the aide, speaking on the condition of anonymity to describe the Democrats’ strategy, adding, that party members “intend to demand that he call for and support the release of all of his files from his time in the Bush White House.”

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To date, Kavanaugh has met with 47 senators — all except one are Republicans. The lone exception is Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, one of three vulnerable Democrats seeking re-election in a state won by Trump. The other two — Sens. Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota and Joe Donnelly of Indiana — have meetings scheduled for Aug. 15, after the Senate returns from its weeklong break.

The documents dispute has been simmering for weeks — so long that Republicans feared it would delay the judge’s confirmation hearings, which Grassley has said he intends to hold in September.

The years Kavanaugh spent as staff secretary, from 2003 to 2006, came at the height of the Iraq War, when policies on torture and treatment of detainees were at the forefront of presidential decision-making; Democrats are keenly interested in knowing what, if any, role he might have played.

Because the staff secretary controls what documents the president sees, he or she is often described as the president’s “inbox and outbox.” Grassley and his fellow Republicans have argued that the records they have requested — coupled with the judge’s some 300 judicial opinions — are more than sufficient to give Democrats, and the public, an idea of his thinking.

To prove their point, Republican members of the Senate Judiciary Committee held a news conference Thursday morning where they appeared in front of 166 boxes, stacked in a pyramid, to represent the roughly 1 million pages they are requesting from the National Archives.

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“I guess there is nothing that demonstrates that a picture is worth a thousand words, than what you see here,” Grassley said.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Sheryl Gay Stolberg © 2018 The New York Times

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