Special counsel Hur is set to testify before a House committee over handling of Biden documents case
WASHINGTON (AP) — The special counsel who impugned the president’s age and competence in his report on how Joe Biden handled classified documents after his years as vice president is set to be questioned himself on Tuesday, as House Republicans seek to keep a spotlight on the unflattering assessment of the president.
Robert Hur will appear before the Judiciary Committee to take hours of questions from Republicans and Democrats on his 345-page report, made public last month, in which he concluded that Biden should not face criminal charges for his handling of sensitive government information when he was vice president.
Hur will say in prepared remarks that he was aware of the need to explain why he’d decided not to charge the president. Such explanations are common but usually confidential; and so he didn’t hold back, particularly in this case.
“The need to show my work was especially strong here,” he says in his prepared remarks. “The Attorney General had appointed me to investigate the actions of the Attorney General’s boss, the sitting President of the United States. I knew that for my decision to be credible, I could not simply announce that I recommended no criminal charges and leave it at that. I needed to explain why.”