Former Indiana Republican senator Dan Coats was confirmed Wednesday as the country’s top spy chief, taking over as Congress demands more information from the intelligence community about alleged contacts between the president’s advisers and Russian officials.
The Senate voted 85 to 12 to confirm Coats as the director of national intelligence, a role in which Coats pledged to work closely with members of Congress to facilitate their various probes into allegations that Russia interfered in the 2016 elections for the purpose of aiding President Donald Trump’s chances of victory.
Coats promised to provide lawmakers access to the intelligence community’s findings during his confirmation hearing last month before the members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. But just hours before the Senate voted to confirm him Wednesday, leaders of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence raised concerns that their access to documents about the Russia investigation was being limited at the very office Coats is taking over.
Committee Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif., said that he was “a little uncomfortable” that the Office of the Director of National Intelligence had not yet provided lawmakers with the “proper computer technology we need to go through the evidence.”