The Phnom Penh Post

Trump ‘will not sack Mueller’

- Olivia Hampton

PRESIDENT Donald Trump insisted on Sunday he has no plans to fire special counsel Mueller, despite his team’s recent attacks on the credibilit­y of the probe into Russian meddling in the US election.

With the ex-FBI director’s investigat­ion making inroads into the president’s inner circle in recent weeks, Republican­s have sought to cast doubt on its impartiali­ty and pressed for a new independen­t prosecutor to investigat­e anti-Trump bias.

This in turn has led to speculatio­n that the administra­tion could be laying the groundwork for firing Mueller.

But Trump shot down those rumours. Asked whether he was going to fire Mueller, he told reporters: “No, I’m not.”

In a letter to congressio­nal committees, Trump campaign lawyer Kory Langhofer alleged the General Services Administra­tion “unlawfully produced” private materials, including privileged communicat­ions that Mueller then used as part of his Russia probe. The GSA is the government agency that supports presidenti­al transition­s – the interim period after a new president is elected but before he takes office.

Langhofer wrote that Mueller’s office “received from the GSA tens of thousands of emails, including a very significan­t vol- ume of privileged material”, according to a copy of the letter published by Politico. The letter added that a warrant should have been obtained for such materials, and said it violated the Presidenti­al Transition Act.

Trump said “my people are very upset about it,” calling the developmen­t “quite sad”.

“I can’t imagine there’s anything on them, frankly, because as we said, there’s no collusion. There’s no collusion whatsoever,” the president added.

But Mueller’s spokesman Peter Carr told CNN that emails were obtained for the probe after “we have secured either the account owner’s consent or appropriat­e criminal process”.

Probe tightens

Mueller was appointed after Trump abruptly fired then-FBI Director James Comey, who was leading an agency probe into the Russia affair.

The president’s Democratic foes have sought to characteri­se the allegation­s of illegality as an attempt to stymie the probe, which has already led to charges against Trump’s for- mer national security advisor Michael Flynn and three other people linked to the presidenti­al campaign.

“ABSOLUTE RED LINE: the firing of Bob Mueller or crippling the special counsel’s office,” tweeted Eric Holder, who served as attorney general under Trump’s predecesso­r Barack Obama. “If removed or meaningful­ly tampered with, there must be mass, popular, peaceful support of both. The American people must be seen and heard - they will ultimately be determinat­ive.”

Democratic Congressma­n Eric Swalwell said: “This is another attempt to discredit Mueller as his #TrumpRussi­a probe tightens.”

Republican­s asked the US Justice Department on Wednesday to name a new independen­t prosecutor to probe alleged bias in the FBI.

The special counsel’s critics have seized upon the case of Peter Strzok, a senior FBI agent whom Mueller removed from his team for sending text messages critical of Trump.

In addition to whether Trump’s campaign team colluded with Russia to help him win last year’s election, the special counsel is also looking at possible obstructio­n of justice linked to Trump’s firing of Comey.

Trump did so in May and later acknowledg­ed he had the Russia probe in mind when he sacked him.

Comey, for his part, wrote a memo alleging Trump had asked him to drop his investigat­ion into Flynn, an act which some say could constitute obstructio­n of justice and thus grounds for seeking Trump’s impeachmen­t.

But the Justice Department’s number two, Rod Rosenstein, insisted this week that the investigat­ion was impartial and free from any political influence.

Trump has repeatedly denied claims of “collusion” with Russia, and denounced the “witch hunt” against him.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP ?? Former FBI Director Robert Mueller, special counsel on the Russian investigat­ion, following a meeting with members of the US Senate Judiciary Committee at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on June 21.
SAUL LOEB/AFP Former FBI Director Robert Mueller, special counsel on the Russian investigat­ion, following a meeting with members of the US Senate Judiciary Committee at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, on June 21.

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