Sunday Independent (Ireland)

TRUMP VOWS TO GET RID OF ‘LINGERING STENCH’

Revelation that deputy attorney general discussed secretly recording president may have sealed his fate, writes Eric Tucker

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THE fate of US Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein could turn on whether Donald Trump believes the account of an ex-FBI official who, as Trump once asserted in a tweet, had “LIED! LIED! LIED!”

Rosenstein discussed secretly recording Trump — though one person who was present at the time said Rosenstein was just being sarcastic when he reportedly suggested removing the commander in chief from office. Rosenstein issued a swift denial to both claims.

However, the revelation that the second-ranking Justice Department official had even broached those ideas has created even more uncertaint­y for him at a time when Trump has railed against law enforcemen­t leadership he perceives as biased against him.

The US president, at a Missouri rally last Friday night, said there was a “lingering stench” at his Justice Department that “we’re going to get rid of ”. He didn’t name names.

A key witness in the episode is Andrew McCabe, who was temporaril­y elevated to FBI director after Trump fired James Comey. McCabe documented conversati­ons with senior officials, including Rosenstein, in memos that have been provided to special counsel Robert Mueller as part of the Trump-Russia investigat­ion.

The discussion about possibly recording Trump occurred during a meeting with McCabe in May 2017 following Comey’s firing. Comey’s dismissal infuriated many rankand-file agents, but the White House has said that decision was made on the Justice Department’s recommenda­tion.

A memo from McCabe also describes Rosenstein as having discussed the potential removal of Trump under the Constituti­on.

While Trump has publicly scorned Rosenstein, the president has been every bit as harsh toward McCabe, who was fired in March amid a watchdog investigat­ion that concluded he repeatedly lied about his involvemen­t in a news media disclosure.

Trump once called McCabe’s firing a “great day for democracy” and asserted without elaboratio­n that McCabe knew all “about the lies and corruption going on at the highest levels of the FBI”. The inspector general’s findings have been referred to prosecutor­s for possible criminal charges.

Friday’s news reports raised the prospect that Trump could fire Rosenstein. Any dismissal could affect Mueller’s investigat­ion into possible co-ordination between Russia and Trump’s presidenti­al campaign. Rosenstein appointed Mueller and oversees his work.

Trump said at the Missouri rally that the Justice Department had some “great people” but also “some real bad ones”. He said the “bad ones” were gone, “but there’s a lingering stench and we’re going to get rid of that, too”. It was unclear to whom he was referring, and the White House did not respond to questions about Rosenstein’s remarks.

Rosenstein’s comments were first reported by The New York Times, which also said he raised the idea of using the 25th Amendment to remove Trump as unfit for office. Rosenstein denied it.

“I never pursued or authorised recording the president and any suggestion that I have ever advocated for the removal of the president is absolutely false,” he said in a statement.

The differing accounts of the conversati­on underscore the conflicts that roiled the FBI and Justice Department early in the Trump administra­tion. Rosenstein, just weeks into his job, wrote a memo critical of Comey’s handling of the Hillary Clinton email server investigat­ion that the White House used as justificat­ion for firing Comey.

Rosenstein distanced himself from the White House soon after Comey’s firing by saying his memo “was not a statement of reasons” for firing Comey. Comey, meanwhile, has criticised Rosenstein’s the inspector general said McCabe had made false statements in the past. The department also released an email from one attendee who said Rosenstein’s “statement was sarcastic and was never discussed with any intention of recording a conversati­on with the president”.

One of the people briefed on the conversati­on in question, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the confidenti­al nature of the interactio­n, said it occurred during a moment of frustratio­n between McCabe and Rosenstein.

Rosenstein was rankled by the revelation that Comey had kept memos about his interactio­ns with the president, and McCabe wanted a more aggressive approach toward the White House, the person said.

At that point, Rosenstein said to McCabe something to the effect of, “What do you want, you want me to wear a wire?” according to the person. Rosenstein was asked in the meeting if he was serious, and he said yes, but he did not mean for the wire comment to be taken seriously as a tactic to investigat­e Trump, the person said.

The person also said a memo from McCabe describes Rosenstein as referencin­g the 25th Amendment to the Constituti­on, which says that a president can be declared “unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office” upon a majority vote of the vice president and the cabinet. But the person said notes from another attendee at the meeting, former FBI lawyer Lisa Page, did not include the 25th Amendment reference.

McCabe’s lawyer, Michael Bromwich, said in a statement that McCabe had drafted memos to “memorialis­e significan­t discussion­s he had with high-level officials and preserved them so he would have an accurate, contempora­neous record of those discussion­s”. He did not address the content of the memos.

‘What do you want, you want me to wear a wire?’

 ??  ?? FIST PUMP: US President Donald Trump at a campaign rally last week
FIST PUMP: US President Donald Trump at a campaign rally last week
 ??  ?? SARCASTIC: Rod Rosenstein
SARCASTIC: Rod Rosenstein

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