(The Hill) Former special counsel Robert Mueller spent almost seven hours testifying Wednesday on Capitol Hill fielding lawmaker questions about his investigation into whether the Trump campaign conspired with Russia to interfere with the 2016 election and if President Trump obstructed justice. In many ways the hearing went as expected Mueller declined to answer a wide swath of questions and other times responded with one-word answers. Democrats used their allotted time to shine a spotlight on key details from the 448-page report while Republicans used their line of questioning to cast doubt on the origins of the 22-month investigation and the credibility of the special counsels office. The back-to-back testimony before the House Judiciary and Intelligence committees yielded little new information though they did succeed in elevating some aspects of Muellers report into the public spotlight. Here are five takeaways from Muellers testimony. Mueller dodges and disappoints Mueller who had spoken publicly only one other time about his investigation did not always appear sure-footed when responding and at times flatly declined to answer questions. Bolstered by instructions by the Justice Department that he limit his testimony Mueller refused to indulge Republican inquiries about the so-called Steele dossier. He also sidestepped questions from Democrats about his opinion on the presidents conduct and impeachment.