The Hamilton Spectator

Sessions does little to inspire confidence

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This appeared in Newsday:

Attorney General Jeff Sessions was given the opportunit­y “to separate fact from fiction and to set the record straight” on the swirling charges of Russian meddling in the 2016 election and the firing of FBI director James Comey for investigat­ing it all.

Disappoint­ingly, he didn’t do so in his testimony Tuesday before the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee. Worse, Sessions refused to commit to tell senators more in a classified, closed-door session.

Sessions was combative in angrily defending his reputation against “scurrilous and false allegation­s” that he personally colluded with Russia in the campaign.

Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon asked Sessions whether there were any undisclose­d reasons for his recusal from the Russia probe.

“Why don’t you tell me? There are none!” he replied indignantl­y.

But Sessions was less convincing in many other answers. It was not reassuring to repeatedly hear “I don’t recall” responses about what happened during the campaign and his contact with Russian officials. He even admitted at one point that he was nervous about some rapid-fire questionin­g.

But his refusal to answer questions about his conversati­ons with President Donald Trump, particular­ly whether they discussed the reasons for Comey’s firing in an Oval Office meeting the day before the dismissal, was most disturbing.

His insistence that there was no reason to recuse himself from the dismissal of Comey because it was due to Comey’s improper handling of the Hillary Clinton email case and not to end the Russia investigat­ion, as Trump himself said in a TV interview, was just not believable.

The White House has not invoked executive privilege and Sessions, in a novel legal argument, said he was trying to protect Trump in case the president wanted to invoke the privilege at some later point.

As Sessions testified, Trump, who travelled to Wisconsin to discuss a workforce developmen­t initiative, declined to answer a reporter’s question about whether he had confidence in his attorney general.

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