Manawatu Standard

Keeping quiet

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WORLD: US Attorney General Jeff Sessions refused yesterday to answer lawmakers’ questions about his discussion­s with President Donald Trump on Russia.

UNITED STATES: US Attorney General Jeff Sessions refused yesterday to answer lawmakers’ questions about his discussion­s with President Donald Trump on Russia and denied lying to Congress about his own contacts with Russians during the 2016 election campaign.

In often testy exchanges with Senate Democrats, Sessions denied misleading them when he said during his Senate confirmati­on hearing earlier this year that he had not met with Russian officials during the campaign.

‘‘I conducted no improper discussion­s with Russians at any time regarding the campaign,’’ Sessions told the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russia’s alleged meddling in the election and possible collusion by Trump aides dominated the five-hour oversight hearing.

Sessions also said Mueller has not interviewe­d him and sought to explain Trump’s decision to fire the director of the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion in May, which the president has said was related to interferen­ce allegation­s.

A Republican former senator from Alabama and the top adviser to Trump’s campaign on national security issues, Sessions had to recuse himself from investigat­ions into alleged Russian interferen­ce after it was revealed in March that he met with Russian ambassador Sergei Kislyak at least twice in 2016.

The Washington Post reported in July that US intelligen­ce agencies picked up intercepts in which Kislyak told the Kremlin he had held substantiv­e discussion­s with Sessions about Trump’s positions on Us-russia relations.

Sessions said yesterday he could not recall specific details of the conversati­on.

‘‘I don’t think there was any discussion­s about the details of the campaign,’’ he said.

‘‘It could have been that in that meeting in my office or at the convention ... some comments were made about what Trump’s positions were. I think that’s possible.’’

Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy told Sessions many committee members believe the attorney general gave ‘‘false testimony’’ when he previously denied meeting with Russians.

Sessions countered that the question related only to matters specific to campaign interferen­ce, and told Leahy he had answered it truthfully.

‘‘I believe my answer was correct.’’

He also repeatedly said he was barred from discussing his confidenti­al conversati­ons with Trump. -AP

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 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? US Attorney General Jeff Sessions testifies before a Senate Judiciary oversight hearing on the Justice Department on Capitol Hill.
PHOTO: REUTERS US Attorney General Jeff Sessions testifies before a Senate Judiciary oversight hearing on the Justice Department on Capitol Hill.

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