In confirmation hearing for intelligence director, U.S. Rep. John Ratcliffe promises he "won't shade the intelligence"

U.S. Rep. John Ratcliffe, R-Heath, speaks during a House Judiciary Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., on Dec. 12, 2019. Andrew Harrer/Pool via REUTERS

In his confirmation hearing Tuesday for director of national intelligence, U.S. Rep. John Ratcliffe, a Republican from Heath, gave two key guidelines for how he would carry out his job: One, he would always follow the law. Two, the information he would provide to the president, Congress and policymakers would be “unvarnished” and unaffected by improper outside influence.

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“I won’t shade the intelligence for anyone,” Ratcliffe said. “I will deliver the unvarnished truth. It won’t be shaded for anyone. What anyone wants the intelligence to reflect won’t impact the intelligence I deliver.”

Ratcliffe, who has represented his northeast Texas district in the U.S. House since 2015, was appearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee less than three months after President Donald Trump nominated him to the position, which oversees 17 intelligence agencies.

Trump first said he would appoint Ratcliffe to the position last year, but Ratcliffe withdrew from consideration amid claims that he'd exaggerated parts of his biography, like his role as the leader of an immigration crackdown while he was a federal prosecutor in the Eastern District of Texas.

Ratcliffe defended his record at the time, and Trump formally nominated him in February.

The public portion of the committee hearing was brief, lasting under three hours, and conducted with rigorous social distancing guidelines. It will continue in a private session in the afternoon. The committee’s chairman, U.S. Sen. Richard Burr, a Republican from North Carolina, said he wanted a speedy vote on the nomination. Ratcliffe’s resume was not a major point of discussion.

In his opening remarks, Ratcliffe told the committee he was compelled to public service after 9/11. His goal was to provide “objective and timely intelligence” as the president’s principal intelligence advisor and in his dealings with Congress.

A key area of initial focus, Ratcliffe said, would be wrestling with the geopolitical and economic impacts of COVID-19 and its origins.

“The American people deserve answers,” Ratcliffe said. “The [intelligence community] will remain laser-focused on providing them.”

Ratcliffe said he’d also pay attention to other key security issues, like Iranian military capabilities and overseas sponsorship of terror groups, the deployment of 5G technology, North Korean nuclear weapon and delivery system development, and cybersecurity and supply chain concerns.

Election security, namely Russian election interference, was also a prominent topic during the hearing. Ratcliffe stated Russia had used “active measures” to interfere in the 2016 and 2018 elections and were actively working to do so in 2020. He said that Russia had failed to change any votes or influence the election in 2016, and committed to bringing information on foreign election interference to Congress.

Repeatedly, Ratcliffe emphasized the importance of the intelligence community’s independence from elected officials. The intelligence enterprise “has to be apolitical,” Ratcliffe said.

The line of questioning reflected the political reality of the time. Trump has been a frequent critic of the nation’s intelligence community. He has also referred to allegations of Russian election interference as a “hoax” repeatedly. Last year, defending his decision to nominate Ratcliffe, President Donald Trump said intelligence agencies had “run amok.”

Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-New Mexico, asked Ratcliffe if he believed a “deep state” was in operation, referencing the President’s claims that civil service bureaucrats were standing in the way of his policy objectives.

“I don’t know what that means. I don’t even know what that is,” Ratcliffe said.

Heinrich then questioned Ratcliffe on whether he had pledged “loyalty” to the president or would emphasize the President’s priorities over national security concerns.

“Keeping politics out of the intelligence community is one of my priorities,” Ratcliffe said.

Senator Angus King, I-Maine, asked about the use of torture in interrogations. Ratcliffe said he would follow the laws and departmental policies barring the use of torture, and King clarified that he was asking as a moral question in absence of the law. He restated the question as a hypothetical, asking what Ratcliffe would do if the law were changed to allow the use of torture. Ratcliffe deferred, saying again that he would follow the law.

Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, served as one of Ratcliffe’s boosters during the hearing, introducing him to the committee in lieu of former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft, who was initially scheduled to introduce the nominee. Instead, Cornyn delivered his own remarks, interspersed with endorsements read aloud from a letter from Ashcroft.

Cornyn said he’d known Ratcliffe personally for 10 years and gave his personal recommendation before questioning started. He said Ratcliffe understood the gravity of the security concerns the U.S. faces, and trusted him to be a competent leader and transparent communicator with Congress.

Ashcroft wrote that Ratcliffe would provide decision makers with “fulsome, transparent intelligence.”

Retiring U.S. Rep. WIll Hurd, R-Helotes, endorsed Ratcliffe’s nomination Wednesday morning in an editorial in The Dallas Morning News, saying Ratcliffe was a problem-solver, detail-oriented, and prepared to face national security challenges including COVID-19.

The Senate, having returned to the Capitol under new social distancing guidelines, is carrying out its duties in new ways.

Much was missing. Chairs normally filled by members of the public, press and the nominee’s family were absent. Committee members’ seats on the dais were mostly empty. Members of the media were limited to a pool representing the media at large. Ratcliffe sat alone at a long table draped in black cloth.

The hearing was broken out into 30 minute blocks, at the end of which was a hard cutoff for Senators’ questions. Committee members observed from their offices and submitted questions for each electronically. When it was their turn, senators appeared in the chamber, took their seats and addressed Ratcliffe. Between those blocks, Burr and Vice Chairman Mark Warner, a Democrat from Virginia, questioned Ratcliffe further.


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