Republican 2024 hopeful Hutchinson: Trump undermining trust in rule of
law
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[July 18, 2023]
By Nathan Layne
(Reuters) - Former Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson, a Republican
running for U.S. president, said on Monday that Donald Trump has "done
great harm" to trust in federal law enforcement through "self-serving"
attempts to undermine investigations of his conduct.
Hutchinson, one of the few Republicans seeking the 2024 nomination who
has criticized the former president, spoke at the National Press Club in
Washington to outline his plans to reform the FBI and other federal law
enforcement agencies.
"Donald Trump has done great harm to our rule of law in this country and
to federal law enforcement. He has undermined their credibility in the
eyes of the public. He has continued his victimization," Hutchinson
said.
Hutchinson's comments come as some Republicans in Congress have stepped
up their critiques of the Justice Department, aiming to undercut U.S.
Special Counsel Jack Smith's probes in to Trump's retention of
classified documents and his role leading up to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack
on the U.S. Capitol.
Trump has long alleged without evidence that the probes in to his
actions are politically motivated.
Hutchinson said he regarded some of Trump's criticisms of the federal
investigation in to his 2016 campaign's ties to Russia, which concluded
in 2019, as justified. But he blasted the former president's ongoing
attacks on the justice system as unwarranted and dangerous.
"They have become self-serving and they have undermined exactly what we
are trying to accomplish in this country, which is a rule of law that
works and criminal justice system that is equal in its treatment of all
individuals," Hutchinson said.
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Former Arkansas Governor and Republican
presidential candidate Asa Hutchinson speaks at a Veterans of
Foreign Wars meeting in Des Moines, Iowa, U.S., April 13, 2023.
REUTERS/Scott Morgan/File Photo
Hutchinson, who has been polling in the low single digits, far
behind the front-runner Trump, laid out a series of reform ideas he
believes would shore up confidence in the FBI and other agencies.
They include requiring that FBI agents record their interviews to
improve transparency and he also said he would reaffirm a policy
ensuring the president does not interfere with federal
investigations.
Hutchinson said he does not support "defunding" the FBI, as has been
proposed by some of Trump's allies in Congress and several of his
Republican rivals for the nomination. Last week Republicans in the
House of Representatives hammered FBI Director Christopher Wray
about what they call the "weaponization" of federal law enforcement
against Trump. Wray denied any partisan bias in how investigations
are conducted.
"I don't believe in chaos. I believe in doing things the right way,"
Hutchinson said. "This is a plan with balance that has very dramatic
reform, but doesn't go crazy that undermines our public safety,
undermines our counterterrorism efforts."
(reporting by Nathan Layne in Wilton, Connecticut; Editing by Scott
Malone and Matthew Lewis)
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