Trump says Sessions safe in job at least
until November elections: Bloomberg
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[August 31, 2018]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President
Donald Trump said on Thursday that Attorney General Jeff Sessions was
safe in his job at least until the November congressional elections,
Bloomberg News reported after interviewing the U.S. leader.
"I just would love to have him do a great job," Bloomberg quoted Trump
as saying. It said the president declined to comment when asked whether
he would keep Sessions in office beyond November.
Trump has repeatedly attacked Sessions for recusing himself from the
investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential
election campaign. After the recusal, Deputy Attorney General Rod
Rosenstein appointed Special Counsel Robert Mueller to lead the probe,
which Trump has called a "witch hunt."
Asked in the Bloomberg News interview whether he would comply if Mueller
issued a subpoena for him to appear for questioning, Trump said, "I'll
see what happens."
"I view it differently," Bloomberg quoted Trump as saying. "I view it as
an illegal investigation" because "great scholars" have said that "there
should never have been a special counsel."
The president has repeatedly criticized Sessions over the Russia probe
and resumed the attacks via Twitter last week, saying the attorney
general had never fully exerted control over the Justice Department.
Sessions, in a rare rebuttal, responded that he took control of the
department the day he became attorney general and would not allow it to
be "improperly influenced by political considerations."
Trump said in a Twitter post on Saturday that Sessions "doesn't
understand what is happening underneath his command position." He
charged that Mueller's probe was "highly conflicted" and that "real
corruption goes untouched."
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U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions hosts a roundtable discussion
with foreign liaison officers from the Joint Interagency Task
Force-South (JIATF-S) at the Justice Department in Washington, U.S.,
August 29, 2018. REUTERS/Allison Shelley
Some Republican lawmakers have predicted Trump would replace
Sessions, a former U.S. senator, after the Nov. 6 elections.
Senator Lindsey Graham, who is close to Trump and a defender of
Sessions, said last week he believed Trump would appoint a new
attorney general but should wait until the elections, in which
Republicans are seeking to maintain control of both the House of
Representatives and Senate.
(Reporting by David Alexander; Editing by Peter Cooney and Chris
Reese)
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