July 17, 2023
Early in a tense hearing on Wednesday, July 12, featuring FBI Director Christopher A. Wray, Representative Ken Buck (R-Colorado) tried to lighten the mood. Amid growing attacks by Republicans on Wray, he noted that Wray had been nominated to his current post —and also a previous post—by Republican presidents, reports The Washington Post.
“According to Wikipedia, you’re still a registered Republican,” Buck said, “and I hope you don’t change your party affiliation after this hearing is over.”
Wray, too, repeatedly leaned into his Republican bona fides. “Yes, I think there were only five votes against,” he said of his 2017 confirmation as FBI director, “and they were all from Democrats.”
Later in the House Judiciary Committee hearing, he told a Republican congresswoman of GOP allegations against him: “The idea that I’m biased against conservatives seems somewhat insane to me, given my own personal background.”
The exchanges highlighted the paradox of Wray’s suddenly becoming Public Enemy No. 1 to congressional Republicans, as they press conspiratorial and highly speculative allegations about the purported weaponization of federal law enforcement.
And while the Trump-nominated FBI director was characteristically even-tempered in his testimony, there were times in which his exasperation at his predicament came to the surface—and in which he showed his critics some teeth.
Multiple Republicans peppered Wray with questions about whether FBI agents or sources were present on January 6 during the attack on the Capitol—feeding a still baseless Tucker Carlson-fueled conspiracy theory that the FBI might have played a role in the insurrection.
When Representative Mike Johnson (R-Louisiana) pressed Wray on the government’s efforts to crack down on misinformation and mentioned the COVID lab-leak theory, Wray took exception.
Wray at other points more subtly pushed back on such allegations.
Republicans continued to allege that the FBI’s search of Donald Trump’s residence at Mar-a-Lago to recover classified documents Trump had withheld was overzealous. And Wray stuck to long-standing FBI policy of not commenting on ongoing cases.
But at one point, he did lean in. When a Democrat asked whether it would be appropriate to keep such documents in bathrooms, ballrooms, and bedrooms, Wray responded somewhat bitingly—while qualifying that he was only speaking generally.
Wray easily could have begged off the question as obviously referring to a specific case, but he didn’t.
Wray got somewhat personal during an exchange with Representative Chip Roy (R-Texas). Roy invoked a “tyrannical” FBI and cited armed agents showing up to arrest a conservative activist who was charged with a crime but later acquitted.
And when Representative Thomas Massie (R-Kentucky) pressed Wray on his not commenting on ongoing matters, Wray noted that “the last administration actually strengthened those policies.”
None of it was terribly heated, but it was also clear that Wray increasingly recognizes that the reason many Americans—mostly his fellow Republicans—have soured on the FBI is the often-flimsy theories he was confronted with, also by his fellow Republicans.
At Wednesday’s hearing, he subtly took aim at this “somewhat insane” set of circumstances.
“Some people refer to me as low-key,” Wray said toward the end of the hearing, “But no one should ever mistake my demeanor for what my spine is made out of.”
Research contact: @washingtonpost