New Straits Times

I think it’ll be fair, says Trump on Russian meddling probe

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WEST PALM BEACH: President Donald Trump said on Thursday he believed he would be fairly treated in a special counsel investigat­ion into Russian meddling in the United States presidenti­al election, but said he did not know how long the probe would last.

The federal investigat­ion has hung over Trump’s White House since he took office almost a year ago, and some Trump allies have, in recent weeks, accused the team of Justice Department Special Counsel Robert Mueller of being biased against the Republican president.

But in an interview with the New York Times, Trump appeared to shrug off concerns about the investigat­ion, which was prompted by US intelligen­ce agencies’ conclusion that Russia tried to help Trump defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton by hacking and releasing embarrassi­ng emails and disseminat­ing propaganda.

“There’s been no collusion. But I think he’s going to be fair,” Trump said in what the paper described as a 30-minute impromptu interview at his golf club here, in Florida.

Mueller has charged four Trump associates in his investigat­ion. Russia has denied interferin­g in the US election.

US Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said this month that he was not aware of any impropriet­y by Mueller’s team.

Trump’s lawyers have been saying for weeks that they had expected the Mueller investigat­ion to wrap up quickly, possibly by the end of this year. Mueller has not commented on how long it will last.

Trump said he did not know how long the investigat­ion would take.

“Timing-wise, I can’t tell you. I just don’t know,” he said.

Trump said he thought a prolonged probe “makes the country look bad”, but said it has energised his core supporters.

“What it’s done is, it’s really angered the base and made the base stronger. My base is strong than it’s ever been,” he said.

The interview was a rare break in Trump’s Christmas vacation in Florida. He has golfed each day aside from Christmas Day, and mainly kept a low profile, apart from the occasional flurry of tweets.

He spent one day golfing with Republican Senator David Perdue from Georgia, who has pushed legislatio­n to cap immigratio­n numbers, and had dinner on Thursday with Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, an internatio­nal trade hawk.

Trump said he hoped to work with Democrats in the US Congress on a spending plan to fix roads and other infrastruc­ture, and on protection for a group of undocument­ed immigrants who were brought to the US as children.

Trump spoke about trade issues, saying he had backed off his hard line on Chinese trade practices in the hope that Beijing would do more to pressure North Korea to end its nuclear and missile testing programme.

He said he had been disappoint­ed in the results.

He also complained about the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta), which his administra­tion is attempting to renegotiat­e in talks with Mexico and Canada.

Trump said Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had played down the importance of Canadian oil and lumber exports to the US when looking at the balance of trade between the two countries.

“If I don’t make the right deal, I’ll terminate Nafta in two seconds. But we’re doing pretty good,” Trump said. Reuters

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Donald Trump

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