Toronto Star

Loyalty on the menu in dinner with Trump

Just a week after inaugurati­on, the president is said to have asked Comey for allegiance. The now ex-FBI boss demurred

- MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT THE NEW YORK TIMES

WASHINGTON— Only seven days after Donald Trump was sworn in as U.S. president, James Comey has told associates, the FBI director was summoned to the White House for a oneon-one dinner with the new commander-in-chief.

The conversati­on that night in January, Comey now believes, was a harbinger of his downfall this week as head of the FBI, according to two people who have heard his account of the dinner.

As they ate, the president and Comey made small talk about the election and the crowd sizes at Trump’s rallies. The president then turned the conversati­on to whether Comey would pledge his loyalty to him. Comey declined to make that pledge. Instead, Comey has recounted to others, he told Trump that he would always be honest with him, but that he was not “reliable” in the convention­al political sense.

The White House says this account is not correct. And Trump, in an interview Thursday with NBC, described a far different dinner conversati­on with Comey in which the director asked to have the meeting and the question of loyalty never came up. It was not clear whether he was talking about the same meal, but they are believed to have had only one dinner together.

By Comey’s account, his answer to Trump’s initial question apparently did not satisfy the president, the associates said. Later in the dinner, Trump again said to Comey that he needed his loyalty.

Comey again replied that he would give him “honesty” and did not pledge his loyalty, according to the account of the conversati­on.

But Trump pressed him on whether it would be “honest loyalty.”

“You will have that,” Comey told his associates he responded.

Throughout his career, Trump has made loyalty from the people who work for him a key priority, often dischargin­g employees he considers insufficie­ntly reliable.

As described by the two people, the dinner offers a window into Trump’s approach to the presidency, through Comey’s eyes. A businessma­n and reality television star who never served in public office, Trump may not have understood that by tradition, FBI directors are not supposed to be political loyalists, which is why Congress in the 1970s passed a law giving them 10-year terms to make them independen­t of the president.

Comey described details of his refusal to pledge his loyalty to Trump to several people close to him on the condition that they not discuss it publicly while he was FBI director. But now that Comey has been fired, they felt free to discuss it on the condition of anonymity.

A White House spokespers­on on Thursday disputed the descriptio­n of the dinner by Comey’s associates.

“We don’t believe this to be an accurate account,” deputy press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said. “The integrity of our law enforcemen­t agencies and their leadership is of the utmost importance to President Trump. He would never even suggest the expectatio­n of personal loyalty, only loyalty to our country and its great people.”

At the dinner described by Trump in his interview with NBC, the conversati­on with Comey was quite different. Trump told NBC that Comey requested it to ask to keep his job.

Trump said he asked the FBI director if he was under investigat­ion, a question that legal experts called highly unusual if not improper. In Trump’s telling, Comey reassured him that he was not. Trump did not say whether he asked Comey for his loyalty. Asked at Wednesday’s White House news briefing whether loyalty was a factor in picking a new FBI director, Sanders said Trump wanted someone who is “loyal to the justice system.”

The dinner described by Comey’s associates came in the early days of Trump’s administra­tion, as the FBI was investigat­ing Russian meddling in the election and possible ties to Trump’s campaign. That investigat­ion has since gained momentum as investigat­ors have developed new evidence and leads.

Trump had met Comey for the first time in January, during the transition, when, along with the intelligen­ce chiefs, the FBI director presented him with evidence of that interventi­on.

Comey was tasked by his fellow intelligen­ce directors to also pull Trump aside and inform him about a secret dossier suggesting that Russia might have collected compromisi­ng informatio­n about him.

The dinner at which the conversati­on Comey related took place was on Jan. 27, almost a month later. CNN reported Thursday that Comey never gave Trump an assurance of his loyalty.

Comey’s associates said that the new president requested the dinner he described, and said that he was wary about attending because he did not want to appear too chummy with Trump, especially amid the Russia investigat­ion. But Comey went because he did not believe he could turn down a meeting with the new president.

During the meal, according to the account of the two associates, Comey tried to explain to Trump how he saw his role as FBI director. Comey told Trump that the country would be best served by an independen­t FBI and Justice Department.

In announcing Comey’s dismissal Tuesday, the White House released documents from the attorney general and the deputy attorney general that outlined why Comey should be fired.

Trump said in the NBC interview, “Regardless of recommenda­tion, I was going to fire Comey.”

“In fact, when I decided to just do it, I said to myself, I said, you know, this Russia thing with Trump and Russia is a made-up story,” Trump said.

 ?? AL DRAGO/THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Trump and then FBI director James Comey shake hands during a White House reception in January.
AL DRAGO/THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO Trump and then FBI director James Comey shake hands during a White House reception in January.

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