Kuwait Times

Trump won’t block Comey testimony

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Donald Trump will not use presidenti­al powers to prevent the ex-FBI director James Comey from testifying to Congress tomorrow, the White House said, setting the stage for potentiall­y explosive testimony later this week. The ousted FBI director will appear tomorrow before the Senate intelligen­ce committee for a hearing sure to be replete with political drama and intrigue. Most major US television networks plan to carry the event live. Some bars in the US capital are even planning to open early for viewing parties.

Comey’s testimony will be the first public remarks since he was summarily fired by Trump in early May, and represent a moment of great peril for this already embattled president. Comey’s sacking came as the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion probes possible collusion between the president’s election campaign team and Russia - which US intelligen­ce believes hoped to tilt the election in the Republican’s favor.

He will face a barrage of questions from Republican and Democratic lawmakers about the circumstan­ces of his firing, as well as allegation­s that Trump tried to get Comey to shelve the investigat­ion of his aides. Comey is said to have written detailed notes about three conversati­ons he had with Trump while still FBI director. The memorandum­s reportedly document the president’s efforts to get the FBI to ease the investigat­ion’s focus on former national security advisor Michael Flynn. Any confirmati­on that Trump tried to press Comey would open the president to damaging allegation­s that he attempted to obstruct an ongoing FBI investigat­ion.

‘Swift and thorough’

The White House on Monday said Trump would not use presidenti­al powers to block Comey from testifying to Congress. The White House had floated the idea that Trump could invoke executive privilege, to protect the confidenti­ality of presidenti­al discussion­s, but some aides were wary that it could look too much like a White House cover-up. Trump’s office put an end to that speculatio­n on Monday, saying: “President Trump will not assert executive privilege regarding James Comey’s scheduled testimony.”

“The president’s power to assert executive privilege is well-establishe­d,” the White House said in a statement, adding that Comey’s testimony would “facilitate a swift and thorough examinatio­n of the facts.” Comey’s hotly awaited appearance on Capitol Hill comes as probes by the Justice Department and several congressio­nal committees heat up. Trump’s decision to fire Comey led the Justice Department to appoint special counsel - former FBI director Robert Mueller - to look into allegation­s of collusion.

Mueller, respected for his independen­ce and thoroughne­ss, has so far been silent about taking over the investigat­ions. He reportedly has met with Comey to discuss the probe, and Comey reportedly sought his approval to testify before lawmakers.

On Wednesday, the House Intelligen­ce Committee issued subpoenas for Trump’s personal lawyer Michael Cohen and Flynn-who was also allegedly part of discussion­s between the president’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and Russian ambassador Sergei Kislyak.

Besides Kushner, Cohen and Flynn, the Justice and Congressio­nal investigat­ions are also looking into the Russia ties of former Trump campaign chief Paul Manafort, political consultant Roger Stone, and foreign affairs advisor Carter Page. A top secret National Security Agency document meanwhile shows that hackers from Russian military intelligen­ce repeatedly tried to break into US voting systems before last year’s presidenti­al election, The Intercept reported Monday. — AFP

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