Millennium Post

Lawmakers ask Trump to turn over any Comey tapes

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WASHINGTON: US lawmakers on Sunday called on President Donald Trump to turn over any tapes of conversati­ons with fired FBI chief James Comey, potentiall­y setting up a showdown with the White House as Democrats considered a boycott of the vote on Comey’s replacemen­t.

In a highly unusual move, Trump last week appeared to suggest on Twitter that he might have tapes of conversati­ons with Comey and warned the former director of the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion against talking to the media. Trump and a White House spokesman declined to confirm or deny whether such tapes exist.

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said the White House must “clear the air” about whether there are any taped conversati­ons.

“You can’t be cute about tapes. If there are any tapes of this conversati­on, they need to be turned over,” Graham told NBC’S “Meet the Press” program.

Trump sparked a political firestorm when he abruptly fired Comey last week. The FBI has been investigat­ing alleged Russian meddling in the US election and possible ties between Moscow and the Trump campaign.

Democrats have accused Trump of attempting to thwart the FBI’S probe and have called for some type of independen­t inquiry into the matter. Trump has said he removed Comey because he was not doing a good job and that Comey had lost the support of FBI employees.

Trump tweeted on Friday that “James Comey better hope that there are no ‘tapes’ of our conversati­ons before he starts leaking to the press!” If there are recordings, Republican Senator Mike Lee of Utah told the “Fox News Sunday” program it was “inevitable” that they would be subpoenaed and the White House would have to release them.

Lee, who was on Trump’s list of potential replacemen­ts for Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, also said recording conversati­ons in the White House is “not necessaril­y the best idea.” Trump’s threat about tapes has intensifie­d calls from Democrats for an independen­t probe of alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 US election. Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said Trump must immediatel­y provide Congress with any tapes and warned that destroying existing tapes would violate the law.

Schumer also said Senate Democrats are weighing whether to refuse to vote on a new FBI director until a special prosecutor is named to investigat­e Trump’s potential ties to Russia.

Russia has denied the claims and the White House says there was no collusion. “To have that special prosecutor, people would breathe a sigh of relief because then there would be a real independen­t person overlookin­g the FBI director,” Schumer told CNN’S “State of the Union” programme.

Trump has continued to question whether it was behind the hacking of email accounts.

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