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Trump Assails Mueller, Drawing Rebukes From Republicans

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump appeared on Sunday to abandon a strategy of deferring to the special counsel examining Russia’s interference in the 2016 presidential election, lashing out at what he characterized as a partisan investigation and raising questions about whether he might seek to shut it down.

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Trump Assails Mueller, Drawing Rebukes From Republicans
By
PETER BAKER
, New York Times

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump appeared on Sunday to abandon a strategy of deferring to the special counsel examining Russia’s interference in the 2016 presidential election, lashing out at what he characterized as a partisan investigation and raising questions about whether he might seek to shut it down.

Trump has long suggested that allegations that he or his campaign conspired with Russia to influence the election were a “hoax” and part of a “witch hunt,” but until this weekend he had largely heeded the advice of lawyers who counseled him not to directly attack Robert Mueller, the special counsel, for fear of aggravating prosecutors.

Now as Mueller extends his inquiry with a subpoena to the Trump Organization evidently in search of business ties with Russia, the president appears to be losing his patience. While his lawyers had reassured him that the investigation would wrap up by Thanksgiving, then Christmas, then early in the new year, it seems increasingly clear that Mueller is not about to conclude his inquiry any time soon.

“Why does the Mueller team have 13 hardened Democrats, some big Crooked Hillary supporters, and Zero Republicans?” Trump wrote on Twitter Sunday morning. “Another Dem recently added...does anyone think this is fair? And yet, there is NO COLLUSION!”

The attack on Mueller, a longtime Republican who was appointed FBI director under a Republican president, George W. Bush, followed a statement by Trump’s personal lawyer published Saturday calling on the Justice Department to end the special counsel investigation. Trump followed up that evening with a tweet arguing that “the Mueller probe should never have been started in that there was no collusion and there was no crime.”

The two weekend tweets were the first time Trump has personally used Mueller’s name on Twitter, and it raised the question once again about whether the president might be seeking to lay the groundwork to try to fire the special counsel. Such a move would surely set off a bipartisan storm of protest, and some Republicans expressed alarm on Sunday.

“If he tried to do that, that would be the beginning of the end of his presidency, because we’re a rule-of-law nation,” Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., who has been an ally of the president, said on “State of the Union” on CNN. “When it comes to Mr. Mueller, he is following the evidence where it takes him, and I think it’s very important he be allowed to do his job without interference, and there are many Republicans who share my view.”

Among them was Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona, a sharp critic of Trump who appeared on the same program. “People see that as a massive red line that can’t be crossed,” he said. He added that he hoped Trump’s advisers prevailed on him not to fire Mueller. “We have confidence in Mueller.”

Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., said if the president was innocent, he should “act like it” and leave Mueller alone. Gowdy warned of dire repercussions if the president tried to fire the special counsel, which might require him to first fire his attorney general or deputy attorney general.

“The president’s going to have a really difficult time nominating and having approved another attorney general,” Gowdy said on “Fox News Sunday.” “I would just counsel the president — it’s going to be a very, very long, bad 2018, and it’s going to be distracting from other things that he wants to do and he was elected do. Let it play out its course. If you’ve done nothing wrong, you should want the investigation to be as fulsome and thorough as possible.”

The House speaker, Paul D. Ryan, R-Wis., issued a statement warning Trump to back off. “As the speaker has always said, Mueller and his team should be able to do their job,” said AshLee Strong, a spokeswoman for Ryan. His counterpart, Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, had no immediate comment, according to his office.

The shift in Trump’s approach comes just days after The New York Times reported that Mueller has subpoenaed records from the Trump Organization. Trump’s lawyers met with Mueller’s team last week and received more details about how the special counsel is approaching the investigation, including the scope of his interest in the Trump Organization specifically.

A president cannot directly fire a special counsel but instead can order his attorney general to do so, and even then has to give a cause like conflict of interest. Since Attorney General Jeff Sessions, a former campaign adviser, has recused himself from the Russia investigation, to Trump’s continuing aggravation, the job would then fall to the deputy attorney general, Rod J. Rosenstein.

But Rosenstein has said as recently as last week that he sees no justification for firing Mueller, meaning that he would either have to change his mind or be removed himself. The third-ranking official at the Justice Department, Rachel Brand, decided last month to step down. The next official in line would be the solicitor general, Noel Francisco, a former White House and Justice Department lawyer under Bush. Trump sought to have Mueller fired last June but backed down after his White House counsel, Donald F. McGahn II, threatened to quit. The president told The Times a month later that Mueller would be crossing a red line if he looked into his family’s finances beyond any relationship with Russia. The White House made no assertion last week that the subpoena to the Trump Organization crossed that red line, but Trump evidently has grown tired of the strategy of being respectful and deferential to the special counsel.

John Dowd, the president’s private lawyer, signaled the shift in approach in a statement given to The Daily Beast shortly after Sessions fired Andrew G. McCabe, the former deputy FBI director who worked closely on the Russia investigation with James B. Comey, the bureau director fired by Trump last year.

“I pray that Acting Attorney General Rosenstein will follow the brilliant and courageous example of the FBI Office of Professional Responsibility and Attorney General Jeff Sessions and bring an end to alleged Russia collusion investigation manufactured by McCabe’s boss James Comey based upon a fraudulent and corrupt dossier,” Dowd said.

A top adviser to Trump said on Sunday that the White House has grown weary of the inquiry. “We have cooperated in every single way, every single paper they’ve asked for, every single interview,” Marc Short, the president’s legislative director, said on “Face the Nation” on CBS. “There’s a growing frustration that after a year and millions and millions of dollars spent on this, there remains no evidence of collusion with Russia.”

When Mueller assembled his team, he surrounded himself with subject-matter experts and trusted former colleagues. As the team filled out, Republican allies of Trump noted that some high-profile members had previously donated money to Democratic political candidates. In particular, Republicans have seized on donations by Andrew Weissmann, who served as FBI general counsel under Mueller, as an example of bias. Weissmann is a career prosecutor but, while in private law practice, he donated thousands of dollars toward President Barack Obama’s election effort.

In his Sunday morning Twitter blasts, Trump also renewed his attacks on Comey and McCabe, who like Mueller are longtime Republicans. Trump fired Comey last May, at first attributing the decision to the FBI director’s handling of the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s private email server but later telling an interviewer that he had the Russia investigation in mind when he made the decision.

Sessions, under intense public pressure from Trump, fired McCabe Friday after the former deputy FBI director was accused of not being candid with an inspector general about authorizing department officials to talk with a reporter about the Clinton inquiry in 2016.

“Wow, watch Comey lie under oath to Senator G when asked ‘have you ever been an anonymous source...or known someone else to be an anonymous source...?'” Trump wrote. “He said strongly ‘never, no.’ He lied as shown clearly on @foxandfriends.”

Trump went on to dismiss reports that McCabe kept detailed memos of his time as deputy FBI director under Trump, just as Comey did. McCabe left those memos with the FBI, which means that Mueller’s team has access to them.

“Spent very little time with Andrew McCabe, but he never took notes when he was with me,” Trump wrote. “I don’t believe he made memos except to help his own agenda, probably at a later date. Same with lying James Comey. Can we call them Fake Memos?”

Trump, who admitted last week that he made up a claim in a meeting with Canada’s prime minister and who is considered honest by only a third of the American people in polls, stayed this weekend at the White House, where he evidently has spent time watching Fox News and stewing about the investigation. After his Twitter blasts on Sunday morning, he headed to his golf club in Virginia.

Michael R. Bromwich, McCabe’s lawyer, fired back by accusing the president of corrupting the law enforcement system. “We will not be responding to each childish, defamatory, disgusting & false tweet by the President,” he wrote on Twitter. “The whole truth will come out in due course. But the tweets confirm that he has corrupted the entire process that led to Mr. McCabe’s termination and has rendered it illegitimate.”

In suggesting that Comey lied under oath to Congress, Trump appeared to be referring to a comment by McCabe that the former director had authorized the media interaction at the heart of the complaint against him. The president’s Republican allies picked up the point on Sunday and pressed their case for the appointment of a prosecutor to look at the origin of the Russia investigation.

“So we know that McCabe has lied” because the inspector general concluded he had not been fully candid, Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, the House majority leader, said on Fox News. “Now he’s saying about Comey — Comey may have lied as well. So I don’t think this is the end of it. But that’s why we need a second special counsel.”

Other Republicans, however, suggested that the Trump administration was going too far. Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida criticized the decision to fire McCabe on a Friday night shortly before his retirement took effect, jeopardizing his pension.

“I don’t like the way it happened,” Rubio said on “Meet the Press” on NBC. “He should’ve been allowed to finish through the weekend.” Speaking of the president, he added: “Obviously he doesn’t like McCabe and he’s made that pretty clear now for over a year. We need to be very careful about taking these very important entities and smearing everybody in them with a broad stroke.”

The president has repeatedly argued that McCabe was tainted because his wife ran for the Virginia state Senate as a Democrat in 2015 and received hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from an organization controlled by Terry McAuliffe, then the governor and a longtime friend of Hillary and Bill Clinton. Jill McCabe lost the race, and Trump reportedly told Andrew McCabe that she was a “loser.”

Andrew McCabe has characterized his firing as an attempt to impede Mueller’s investigation, which beyond collusion is also focused on whether the president has attempted to obstruct justice by firing Comey. “This is part of an effort to discredit me as a witness,” McCabe said Friday.

The Republican majority on the House Intelligence Committee has concluded that there was no systematic collusion between Russia and Trump’s campaign and shut down its investigation, a decision that the Democrats on the panel objected to. The Senate Intelligence Committee is still actively investigating even as Mueller’s team is.

Mueller has established that Russia tried to interfere in the election to benefit Trump and indicted three Russian organizations and 13 Russian individuals in the effort, although the indictment included no allegation that the president’s campaign was involved. Trump’s administration last week sanctioned those organizations and individuals.

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