By Reuters
U.S. Attorney General William Barr was expected to release his summary of the long-awaited special counselโs report on Russian meddling in the 2016 election on Sunday as lawmakers drew battle lines on how to respond to the investigation that has cast a pall over Donald Trumpโs presidency.
Special Counsel Robert Mueller sent his report to Attorney General William Barr on Friday, leaving members of Congress, the media and Trump himself waiting to learn its findings after a 22-month investigation of possible Russian connections.
A Justice Department official said the report summary would be released by 4 p.m. EDT (2000 GMT).
Trump, who decried the probe as a witch hunt and waste of time, was at his resort in Palm Beach, Florida. He went to his golf club on Saturday and Sunday but was uncharacteristically silent about Fridayโs conclusion of the Mueller probe.
Barr, the top U.S. law enforcement official, spent nine hours studying the report on Saturday and was back at the Justice Department on Sunday. Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general who appointed Mueller to lead the investigation, was also there.
Barr said he hoped to make public a summary of its โprincipal conclusionsโ over the weekend and a person familiar with the matter said it was expected to come out on Sunday. The White House has not received or been briefed on the report, spokesman Hogan Gidley said on Sunday.
Whatever the report concludes, Democrats vowed to pursue investigations on a wide range of issues involving Trump, from his business dealings to hush-money payments.
They called for the full release of the report, as well as documents backing up its findings, and have promised to subpoena any information they do not get. Many Republicans also want the report released and say it will vindicate Trump. Some cautioned portions of it might need to remain confidential.
There appeared to be initial good news for Trump and his inner circle, as Mueller did not bring any additional indictments when he handed the report over to Barr on Friday.
That signals there might be no more criminal charges against Trump associates on the issue of whether the Trump campaign conspired with Russia to help the real estate magnate beat Democrat Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential race.
Democratic and Republican lawmakers disagree about whether no criminal charges meant there was no cooperation between the Trump campaign and Moscow.
Muellerโs court filings already showed a number of top Trump aides had contact with Russians during the campaign and after the election and that some of them lied about it.
โWe know there was collusion. Why thereโs been no indictments we donโt know,โ U.S. Representative Jerrold Nadler, the Democratic chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, said on CNNโs โState of the Union.โ

REPUBLICAN DEFENSE
Such comments reveal Democrats are determined to try to โgo afterโ Trump, said Senator Ted Cruz, a Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee.
โWhat theyโre basically saying is that theyโre going to impeach the president for being Donald Trump,โ he told CNN.
Democratic leaders in Congress have rejected talk of impeachment as premature.
However, House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, a Democrat, told ABCโs โThis Weekโ that his panel has a particular obligation to determine whether Trump was โcompromised in any way, whether that is criminal or not.โ
It was not known what Muellerโs report says about another key point: whether Trump committed obstruction of justice to hinder the Russia investigation by acts such as firing FBI Director James Comey in 2017.
U.S. intelligence agencies concluded shortly before Trump took office in January 2017 that Moscow meddled in the election with a campaign of email hacking and online propaganda aimed at sowing discord in the United States, hurting Clinton and helping Trump.
Mueller brought charges against 34 people and three companies during his investigation, with prison sentences for some of Trumpโs former aides such as campaign chairman Paul Manafort and longtime personal lawyer Michael Cohen. None of those charges, however, directly related to whether Trumpโs campaign worked with Moscow.
Trump took White House counsel Pat Cipollone and Emmet Flood with him to Florida. His only public statements on Sunday were two tweets: โGood morning. Have a Great Day!โ and โMake America Great Again!โ
Trump denies collaborating with Moscow or obstructing justice. Russia says it did not interfere in the election.
Trump and his team still face legal risks even if the report does not find that they committed crimes, and congressional Democrats on Saturday vowed to keep looking into his activities.
Trumpโs business, including negotiations over building a Trump tower in Moscow, his charity and his inaugural committee remain under investigation.
Other prosecutors have picked up strands of the Mueller probe, most notably the U.S. Attorneyโs Office for the Southern District of New York, which is looking into Trumpโs business practices and financial dealings.
Barr told lawmakers on Friday that he is โcommitted to as much transparency as possible.โ
Senator Marco Rubio, a Republican, urged the same from the White House. โThe best thing for the country and for the president is for this probe to move forward and to be concluded,โ he said on NBCโs โMeet the Press.โ




