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Former Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway met with January 6 committee

Kellyanne Conway, who served in the White House as a senior adviser to former President Donald Trump, is seen Monday walking into a meeting with the House January 6 committee on Capitol Hill in Washington.

(CNN) — Kellyanne Conway, who served in the White House as a senior adviser to then-President Donald Trump, met with the House select committee investigating the January 6, 2021, insurrection in person for roughly five hours on Monday, according to a source familiar with the meeting.

The committee has not publicly subpoenaed Conway, and Conway told CNN on Monday she voluntarily appeared before the panel.

“I am here voluntarily,” Conway said when taking a break from her interview.

Asked when she last spoke with Trump, Conway said: “Last week he called me.”

When asked what the January 6 committee has asked her in the interview, Conway said: “I won’t discuss the committee’s work.”

Conway, historically a staunch supporter of Trump, acknowledged in her book that Trump lost the 2020 presidential election and said he received bad advice from those around him.

“Despite the mountains of money Trump had raised, his team simply failed to get the job done. A job that was doable and had a clear path, if followed,” Conway wrote in “Here’s the Deal,” which was published in May. “Rather than accepting responsibility for the loss, they played along and lent full-throated encouragement (privately, not on TV) when Trump kept insisting he won.”

Conway’s interview demonstrates the committee is still working to complete its investigation while simultaneously working to finish its final report ahead of the Republican takeover of Congress in January.

Members of the committee are in active discussions about what to include in the panel’s final report, which they’ve said will be released by the end of the year. The members expect it will focus on issues beyond how Trump’s efforts to prevent the peaceful transfer of power fueled the violence that day.

The report will effectively serve as the committee’s closing statement but with less than two months left before the panel expires, as Republicans will take over the majority of the House in January.

“I would like to see our report be as broad and inclusive as possible,” committee member Rep. Adam Schiff, a California Democrat, told CNN on Sunday. “We are discussing as a committee among the members what belongs in the body of the report, what belongs in the appendices of the report, what is beyond the scope of our investigation, and we’ll reach those decisions in a collaborative manner.”