Daily Dispatch

Comey book on Trump under fire by his critics

-

FORMER FBI director James Comey fended off attacks over his blistering criticism of President Donald Trump as his new book hit the stores and held the top slot on Amazon’s bestseller list.

Comey, who was fired by the US leader in May 2017, describes Trump in the book as “morally unfit” for office and a compulsive liar who threatens fundamenta­l American values.

But critics say the veteran prosecutor has simply sought to even his score with the president through petty criticisms in the pointedly titled A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies and Leadership.

In an interview with National Public Radio to kick off the release Tuesday, Comey retorted that his descriptio­ns of Trump’s over-long neckties, his tangerine hair and skin, and the size of his hands were simply an attempt to engage the reader through vivid storytelli­ng.

“I’m not making fun of the president. I’m trying to be an author, which I’ve never been before in my life,” Comey said.

“But while I’m typing, I can hear my editor’s voice ringing in my head, ‘Bring the reader with you. Show them inside your head. Bring them with you’.” Comey’s memoir alternates between philosophi­cal musings and advice on the issue of leadership – insisting on the need for honesty and transparen­cy in public life.

The former FBI chief condemns Trump as having brought to the US capital never-before seen values and ways in a US president, running the White House like a Mafia don.

“This president is unethical, and untethered to truth and institutio­nal values,” he writes. “What is happening now is not normal.”

But the book has also unleashed a torrent of attacks against Comey – accused by his critics of self-satisfied moralising.

Former Republican presidenti­al candidate Mike Huckabee labelled him “sanctimoni­ous” and a self-promoter with an “enormous ego”. Trump branded him an “untruthful slimeball” and called for his prosecutio­n.

Comey has strongly defended his book, and denied suggestion­s he wanted to capitalise on his notoriety to enter politics. He is doing a number of media interviews and plans appearance­s in about a dozen cities.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa