Comey's caution to meet Trump's tweets in
Russia hearing
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[June 08, 2017]
By Warren Strobel and Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former FBI Director
James Comey will tell Congress on Thursday that President Donald Trump
pressed him repeatedly to halt a probe into his ex-national security
adviser's ties with Russia and to declare publicly that Trump himself
was not under investigation.
Comey's testimony in the most widely anticipated congressional hearing
in years will put at center stage a high-stakes clash between two men
with vastly different personas.
The outcome could have significant repercussions for Trump's 139-day-old
presidency as special counsel Robert Mueller and multiple congressional
committees investigate whether Trump's campaign team colluded with
Russia during the 2016 presidential election. The White House and Russia
deny any collusion occurred.
In written testimony released by the Senate Intelligence Committee on
Wednesday, Comey quoted Trump as telling him the Russia investigation
was a "cloud" impairing his ability to operate as president.
Comey said in his statement that in a one-on-one meeting in the Oval
Office on Feb.14, Trump asked him to drop an investigation of former
national security adviser Michael Flynn that is part of a wider probe
into Russia's alleged meddling in the 2016 presidential election.
"I hope you can see your way clear to letting this go, to letting Flynn
go," Comey quoted Trump as saying.
Comey also said Trump told him during a one-on-one dinner on Jan. 27
that he needed "loyalty."
Trump fired the FBI chief on May 9, setting off a political firestorm,
and he has since called Comey a "showboat" and a "grandstander."
Democrats, along with some Republicans, on the committee will use the
hearing on Thursday to press for further details of any attempts by
Trump to blunt the Russia investigation.
"I’m very concerned about the implication that Comey keeping his job was
dependent on his loyalty or, in Comey’s words, developing a ‘patronage
relationship.’ That is another way the President sought to impede the
investigation," Democratic Senator Ron Wyden said in a comment emailed
to Reuters.
Senator Susan Collins, a Republican member of the panel, said earlier
this week: "I want to know more also about the president's interactions
with Mr. Comey with regard to the investigation into Michael Flynn. ...
It makes a big difference what the exact words were, the tone of the
president, the context of the conversation."
But Republican Senator Richard Burr, the panel's chairman, sought to
downplay Comey's "loyalty" remark, saying: "I don't think it's wrong to
ask for loyalty from anybody in an administration."
Trump's attorney, Marc Kasowitz, released a statement on Wednesday
saying the president felt "totally vindicated" by Comey's
acknowledgement that he had told Trump on three occasions that he was
not personally under investigation.
Despite landing himself in other political controversies, including his
handling of the FBI investigation of 2016 Democratic presidential
nominee Hillary Clinton's private email server, Comey is widely seen as
cautious and fact-oriented.
"One thing you don't ever hear about him is (that) people don't think he
tells the truth. He brings a lot of credibility," said Benjamin Wittes,
a Comey confidant and senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.
Less than five months into office, Trump has proven himself to be
impulsive and visceral, turning to Twitter to lambaste perceived
adversaries in 140 characters or less.
[to top of second column] |
President Donald Trump (L) speaks in Ypilanti Township, Michigan
March 15, 2017 and FBI Director James Comey testifies before a
Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., May 3, 2017
in a combination of file photos. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/Kevin
Lamarque/File Photo
AWKWARD RELATIONSHIP
As Comey's written testimony underscored, he and the U.S. president
had an awkward, topsy-turvy relationship.
Then-candidate Trump excoriated Comey last summer for deciding not
to prosecute Clinton over her handling of government emails, then
praised him when he reopened the issue in October just days before
the election.
Trump initially kept Comey on as FBI director, and publicly embraced
him at a January White House event. Two days after firing him, Trump
said it was because of "this Russia thing."
Trump is widely expected to use his Twitter account, which lists
31.8 million followers, to counterpunch at Comey on Thursday -
perhaps even in real time.
The Republican president's unconstrained use of Twitter has
confounded allies and skeptics alike.
"Every time you tweet, it makes it harder on all of us who are
trying to help you. I don’t think you did anything wrong. Don’t get
in the way of an investigation that could actually clear you,"
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham told Fox News on Wednesday.
Despite the high drama, Comey is not expected to drop any major new
bombshells, or directly accuse Trump of trying to obstruct justice
by asking him to halt the FBI probe of Flynn.
He is also unlikely to reveal new details of the ongoing Russia
investigation. U.S. law enforcement officials said Comey had
discussed his testimony with Mueller's investigative team to ensure
it did not interfere with the special counsel's probe.
"The one thing you know he's not going to do, you know he's not
going to reach a conclusion (on the legality of Trump's actions) and
he's not going to talk about the underlying investigation," said
Stephen Ryan, a former federal prosecutor and congressional
investigator now at the McDermott, Will & Emery law firm.
Still, Ryan said the testimony, and senators' questions, would be
historic. The closest comparison, he said, was the appearance 44
years ago of President Richard Nixon's White House counsel John
Dean, who, after being fired by Nixon, gave damning testimony in
1973 to the Senate Watergate Committee.
(Additional reporting by John Walcott; Editing by Yara Bayoumy and
Peter Cooney)
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