What comes after Mueller? Investigations, lawsuits and more
WASHINGTON After months of anticipation, Congress finally heard testimony from former special counsel Robert Mueller. So what now?
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Mueller's appearance was "a crossing of a threshold," raising public awareness of what Mueller found. And Democrats after the hearing said they had clearly laid out the facts about the Mueller report, which did not find a conspiracy between the Trump campaign and Russia but detailed extensive Russian intervention in the 2016 election. Mueller also said in the report that he couldn't clear President Donald Trump on obstruction of justice.
But it remains to be seen how the testimony will affect public views of Trump's presidency and the push for impeachment. Mueller said some of the things that Democrats wanted him to say including a clear dismissal of Trump's claims of total exoneration but he declined to answer many of their questions, and he spoke haltingly at times. Trump claimed victory, saying Mueller did "a horrible job."
Democrats say they will continue to hold Trump to account. A look at the ways they will try to do that in the coming months:
INVESTIGATIONS CONTINUE
Democrats have struggled to obtain testimony from some of the most crucial figures in Mueller's report, including former White House counsel Donald McGahn. And the few people they have interviewed, such as former White House aide Hope Hicks, have failed to give them new information beyond what's in Mueller's report.
But Democrats have multiple investigations of the president ongoing that don't require cooperation from the White House or Justice Department. The House intelligence and financial services committees are probing Trump's finances, an area that Mueller appears to have avoided. And the intelligence panel is investigating Trump's negotiations to build a Trump Tower in Moscow during the campaign.
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