At events across early primary states, voters asked about health care and school shootings and immigration. Questioners were far less likely to address the report by the special counsel, Robert Mueller, which was delivered to Attorney General William Barr on Friday.
Democratic voters said they cared deeply about the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election but weren’t quite sure what to make of the latest twist, exactly.
“We don’t know what’s in it,” said Alane Sullivan, 63, a retired businesswoman, after attending a town hall meeting with presidential hopeful Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., in Rye, New Hampshire. “One thing about people in New Hampshire: They are looking for answers, and they knew she wouldn’t know yet.”
The lack of questions at campaign events about the report surprised some of the candidates, who had come prepared with lines about the latest development in the nearly two-year investigation.
“I tried to kind of delicately bring it up because I think it is the major issue,” Klobuchar said after her event.
In South Carolina, the one question former Rep. Beto O’Rourke, D-Texas, who also is seeking the presidential nomination, fielded about the Mueller report came from state Sen. Marlon Kimpson, a local Democrat and a host of the event. He asked whether Congress should consider impeaching the president “assuming there’s facts and evidence” that President Donald Trump knew about collusion or coordination with Russians who meddled in the 2016 election.
But others in attendance figured the answers would come later.
“I don’t think you can really process anything right now, because we don’t know what’s in it,” said Amy Drennan, 42, who works for a magazine publisher.
O’Rourke said that the nation should “employ this mechanism of impeachment as an absolute last resort. Ultimately, that will be a decision for our representatives in Congress to make.” But he also said that the matter would “ultimately” be decided “at the ballot box in 2020.”
With no detailed information available, Democrats have focused their attention on pressuring Barr to release the full report quickly.
“My No. 1 focus right now is to get it public,” Klobuchar said after her town hall meeting. “Ninety percent of Americans want to see it public.”