By Richard Cowan and Katharine Jackson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Former President Donald Trump is too much of a coward to obey a subpoena from the U.S. Congress compelling him to testify to a special committee investigating his role in the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol, House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi suggested on Sunday.
“I don’t think he’s man enough to show up. I don’t think his lawyers will want him to show up because he has to testify under oath,” Pelosi said in an interview with MSNBC.
“We’ll see if he’s man enough to show up,” she added.
On Friday, the select committee announced that it had issued the subpoena to Trump, giving him until Nov. 4 to submit a wide range of documents related to his activities before and after the deadly Jan. 6 attack by the former president’s supporters. The panel also informed Trump that it wants him to appear for testimony on or about Nov. 14.
The attack on the Capitol erupted as Trump supporters attempted to stop Congress from formally certifying Democrat Joe Biden’s decisive win in the 2020 presidential election.
Trump and Pelosi have had a long, stormy relationship.
She guided two impeachment proceedings against him and their dislike of each other sometimes was on public display during his presidency.
At the conclusion of Trump’s 2020 “State of the Union” speech to Congress, Pelosi disdainfully tore in half a printed copy of that address as she sat behind him during the nationally televised event. That came after Trump arrived at the House podium to begin the speech and refused to shake Pelosi’s hand.
The previous year, a White House meeting between Trump and congressional leaders on U.S. policy in Syria erupted in anger when Trump reportedly called Pelosi a “third-rate politician” and later said she was “unhinged.”
Outside the White House following the meeting that Democrats stormed out of, Pelosi told reporters Trump had suffered a “meltdown.”
Also on Sunday, Republican Representative Liz Cheney told NBC’s “Meet the Press” that Trump likely has committed several criminal offenses that the U.S. Department of Justice potentially can prosecute him on.
“We have been very clear about a number of different criminal offenses that are likely at issue here,” said Cheney, one of two Republican members on the select House panel.
“He has demonstrated his willingness to use force to attempt to stop the peaceful transition of power,” Cheney said.
She did not lay out specific criminal charges the committee could recommend in an upcoming report following a more than year-long investigation.
Cheney, who lost her Republican leadership role over her criticisms of Trump, as well as her 2022 primary election, said, “We have put on testimony that he admitted that he lost (the 2020 presidential election).
“But even if he thought that he had won, you may not send an armed mob to the Capitol. You may not sit for 187 minutes and refuse to stop the attack while it’s underway. You may not send a tweet that incites further violence,” Cheney said.
Cheney did not say what the panel would do if Trump refuses to cooperate with the subpoena. If he testifies, she said, “he’s not going to turn this into a circus.”
(Reporting by Richard Cowan and Katharine Jackson; Editing by Bill Berkrot)