Bannon testifies before US House Committee on Russia links

Testimony comes in the wake of his fall from power after being quoted as seeing the president's son as engaging in "treasonous" behaviour for taking a meeting with Russians during the 2016 campaign.

Bannon last week he stepped down from Breitbart News, which he had helped make a powerful conservative force. January 16, 2017
AFP

Bannon last week he stepped down from Breitbart News, which he had helped make a powerful conservative force. January 16, 2017

Former top White House aide Steve Bannon appeared on Tuesday at the House Intelligence Committee to testify behind closed doors in its sensitive probe into the Trump campaign's links to Russia.

It is the first time Bannon has testified in the probe of whether campaign associates of the president colluded with Russia in its bid to influence the 2016 US elections.

It was not likely to be Bannon's last such testimony: The New York Times reported Tuesday that Bannon has been subpoenaed by Robert Mueller, the Justice Department special counsel investigating the same issue.

That made Bannon the first person from President Donald Trump's inner circle to receive a grand jury subpoena from Mueller in the probe, which is also looking at whether Trump has tried to obstruct the investigation.

The testimony of Trump's estranged political strategist could be explosive: he had a front-row seat as chief executive of the 2016 election campaign in its final months, and as a top policy adviser in the first seven months of the administration.

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Fire and Fury

An incendiary book released last week, Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House, by Michael Wolff, quoted him as saying that a pre-election meeting involving Trump's eldest son Donald Jr and a Kremlin-linked Russian lawyer was "treasonous."

Wolff, who painted a picture of an erratic and poorly informed president, was given substantial access to the White House during Trump's first year by Bannon.

A hard-line nationalist who sought to shake up US domestic and foreign policy, Bannon, 64, was forced out as Trump's chief strategist in August.

His actions since then – most notably supporting the failed Senate campaign of Alabama Republican Roy Moore, but also his comments in the Wolff book – have left him increasingly isolated in conservative circles.

Last week, he stepped down from Breitbart News, which he had helped make a powerful conservative force, and he lost the support of the Mercer family, wealthy conservative power brokers.

Underscoring the break, Trump said Bannon had "lost his mind" and branded him "Sloppy Steve" via Twitter.

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