Daily Dispatch

Trump move sparks Russian probe fury

Critics say Whitaker’s selection as AG is a ploy to discredit ‘collusion’ inquiry

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President Donald Trump was accused of pushing America toward a constituti­onal crisis after his firing of the attorney general cast doubt over the future of an explosive probe into election collusion with Russian agents.

Trump emerged from Tuesday’s mid-term elections promising a new era of cooperatio­n, but suspicions that he is trying to kill the Russia probe and an extraordin­ary intensific­ation of his war with journalist­s has thrown Washington into turmoil.

The investigat­ion by special counsel Robert Mueller’s into whether the Trump campaign colluded with Moscow during the 2016 election has been hanging over Trump throughout his turbulent presidency.

Trump has continuous­ly threatened that he has the power to shut down what he calls “a witch-hunt” and on Wednesday he took the first potential step when he replaced his attorney-general, Jeff Sessions, with loyalist Matthew Whitaker.

The switch, announced abruptly in a Trump tweet, provoked consternat­ion across Washington, where politician­s from both sides of the aisle have long warned that political interferen­ce in Mueller’s work cannot be tolerated.

Democrats, who won the lower house of Congress in Tuesday’s midterm elections, now see Trump as close to crossing that line with the ultimate goal of covering up alleged crimes. “The rule of law is disappeari­ng before our eyes,” tweeted Sally Yates, a deputy attorney- general under Trump’s predecesso­r Barack Obama and briefly in the top job under Trump before he sacked her.

“He wants a political crony to protect him from the investigat­ion of his own campaign,” she said.

Neal Katyal and George Conway, two prominent Washington lawyers, wrote in The New York Times that Trump was already breaking the law by appointing Whitaker without Senate confirmati­on.

The rushed appointmen­t “is unconstitu­tional. It’s illegal. And it means that anything Mr Whitaker does, or tries to do, in that position is invalid,” they argued.

In cities nationwide, protesters took to the streets urging Congress to protect Mueller’s probe. “Matthew Whitaker has criticised Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion again and again,” said Noah Bookbinder at a park near the White House, where some 500 demonstrat­ors had gathered as part of the “Nobody Is Above The Law” protests.

“He’s called it a lynch mob,” said Bookbinder, head of the Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics, a Washington group.

“He said it should be shut down. Congress has to step in, and protect this investigat­ion.”

Trump said on Wednesday that the midterms, where Democrats won the House of Representa­tives and Republican­s held the Senate, meant both sides would have to learn bi-partisansh­ip.

But if anything, the election aftermath has featured even hotter controvers­y than before, whether over Mueller or Trump’s other favourite bugbear – the media.

At a press conference on Wednesday, Trump branded CNN reporter Jim Acosta an “enemy of the people” when he posed questions, including about the Russia probe, and refused to give up the mic.

The row, carried live on national TV networks, was followed by Trump issuing angry put-downs to several other reporters. Shortly after, the White House took the extremely rare measure of revoking Acosta’s press pass.

On Thursday, the Acosta incident entered even more bizarre territory when the White House was accused of tweeting a video doctored to make the reporter appear more aggressive in fending off the female press aide who tried to remove his mic.

Answering allegation­s on Thursday that the White House had used a clip edited by a notorious right-wing conspiracy theorist, Trump spokespers­on Sarah Sanders said: “We stand by our statement.” –

 ?? ALVAREZ Picture: GETTY IMAGES/AFPE/DUARDO MUNOZ ?? UNITED FRONT: People attend a protest, after President Donald Trump fIred attorney-general Jeff Sessions, in Times Square in New York City. Trump replaced him with Mathew Whitaker, accused of opposing a probe into Trump’s possible collusion with Russia.
ALVAREZ Picture: GETTY IMAGES/AFPE/DUARDO MUNOZ UNITED FRONT: People attend a protest, after President Donald Trump fIred attorney-general Jeff Sessions, in Times Square in New York City. Trump replaced him with Mathew Whitaker, accused of opposing a probe into Trump’s possible collusion with Russia.

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