In testimony before Congress, special counsel Robert Mueller can shed much-needed light on the content of his report, the investigation that preceded and will flow from it, and the actions of Attorney General William Barr. Rather than engage in the normal scattershot questioning punctuated by speechifying, the House Judiciary Committee should assign its able attorney Norman Eisen to conduct the questioning. Members could then follow up with additional questions.
Here is an array of potential questions (aided by Benjamin Wittes's must-read Lawfare blog summary):
* Mr. Mueller, the attorney general said you did not find “collusion.” However, you did not look for collusion.