Senior U.S. Republican senator: 'Let Mr.
Mueller do his job'
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[January 02, 2018]
By Valerie Volcovici
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The special counsel
investigation of links between Russia and President Trump's 2016
election campaign should continue without interference in 2018, despite
calls from some Trump administration allies and Republican lawmakers to
shut it down, a prominent Republican senator said on Sunday.
Lindsey Graham, who serves on the Senate armed forces and judiciary
committees, said Department of Justice Special Counsel Robert Mueller
needs to carry on with his Russia investigation without political
interference.
"This investigation will go forward. It will be an investigation
conducted without political influence," Graham said on CBS's Face the
Nation news program.
"And we all need to let Mr. Mueller do his job. I think he's the right
guy at the right time."
The question of how Russia may have interfered in the election, and how
Trump's campaign may have had links with or co-ordinated any such
effort, has loomed over the White House since Trump took office in
January. It shows no sign of receding as Trump prepares for his second
year in power, despite intensified rhetoric from some Trump allies in
recent weeks accusing Mueller's team of bias against the Republican
president.
Trump himself seemed to undercut his supporters in an interview last
week with the New York Times in which he said he expected Mueller was
"going to be fair.”
Russia's role in the election and the question of possible links to the
Trump campaign are the focus of multiple inquiries in Washington. Three
committees of the Senate and the House of Representatives are
investigating, as well as Mueller, whose team in May took over an
earlier probe launched by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI).
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Sen. Lindsey Graham speaks with reporters in Washington, U.S.,
December 6, 2017. REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein
Several members of the Trump campaign and administration have been
convicted or indicted in the investigation.
Trump and his allies deny any collusion with Russia during the
campaign, and the Kremlin has denied meddling in the election.
Graham said he still wants an examination of the FBI's use of a
dossier on links between Trump and Russia that was compiled by a
former British spy, Christopher Steele, which prompted Trump allies
and some Republicans to question Mueller's inquiry.
On Saturday, the New York Times reported that it was not that
dossier that triggered an early FBI probe, but a tip from former
Trump campaign foreign policy adviser George Papadopoulos to an
Australian diplomat that Russia had damaging information about
former Trump rival Hillary Clinton.
"I want somebody to look at the way the Department of Justice used
this dossier. It bothers me greatly the way they used it, and I want
somebody to look at it," Graham said.
But he said the Russia investigation must continue. "As a matter of
fact, it would hurt us if we ignored it," he said.
(Reporting by Valerie Volcovici; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Bill
Rigby)
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