The National - News

Former FBI chief says Trump pressured him to back off

Comey goes public for first time since president fired him

- Rob Crilly Foreign Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON // The former director of the FBI has accused president Donald Trump and his administra­tion of pressuring him to ease off his investigat­ion into campaign links to Russia before sacking him and then lying about the reasons.

James Comey’s testimony to the senate’s intelligen­ce committee yesterday was the first time he had spoken publicly since he was fired last month.

With details of nine phone calls and meetings, he painted a picture of a president growing increasing­ly frustrated at not being able to shake the cloud of suspicion that his aides had colluded with Russia during the election campaign.

Mr Comey said he was so troubled by the conversati­ons that he started noting down what took place.

“I was honestly concerned that he might lie about the nature of our meeting, so I thought it really important to document,” he said of his first meeting with the president. “I knew there might come a day when I need a record of what happened, not only to defend myself, but to protect the FBI.”

After being praised for his work by the president, he said he learnt of his dismissal on television.

He was angered, he said, by White House statements that he was not up to the job and had lost the support of his staff. “The administra­tion then chose to defame me and, more importantl­y, the FBI, by saying the organisati­on was poorly led,” he said. “Those were lies, plain and simple.”

Mr Trump later admitted that the Russia investigat­ion was part of his reasoning. Mr Comey told the committee he had leaked his notes on his meetings with Mr Trump through a friend “because I thought that might prompt the appointmen­t of a special counsel” to investigat­e the Trump campaign’s possible collusion with Russian meddling in the presidenti­al election.

Last year US agencies said they believed Moscow’s intelligen­ce agencies had used hackers to try to sway the election in Mr Trump’s favour.

Although there is no evidence that anyone from Mr Trump’s circle knew about Russia’s efforts, the revelation­s sparked accusation­s of a cover-up.

That was heightened last month when the president fired the man leading the investigat­ion.

Mr Comey’s testimony will only add to the sense that Mr Trump tried to pressure his FBI director before sacking him.

In a written opening statement, Mr Comey described a one-to-one dinner in January, during which he feared the independen­ce of the FBI was being threatened by a president trying to establish a “patronage relationsh­ip”.

“A few moments later, the president said, ‘I need loyalty, I expect loyalty’. I didn’t move, speak, or change my facial expression in any way during the awkward silence that followed,” he said.

The awkwardnes­s lifted only when the stunned FBI director agreed to show “honest loyalty”.

He also described a February meeting in the Oval Office during which he believed Mr Trump asked him to drop any investigat­ion of Michael Flynn, who was fired as national security adviser when it emerged he misled officials over meetings with Russia’s ambassador to the US.

“He then said, ‘ I hope you can see your way clear to letting this go, to letting Flynn go. He is a good guy. I hope you can let this go’,” Mr Comey said. “I replied only that ‘he is a good guy’.”

Opponents are scouring his words for evidence that the president is guilty of obstruct- ing justice – one of the charges that forced Richard Nixon to resign over the Watergate scandal.

At the least, they say, it shows Mr Trump is running the White House like a personal fiefdom.

Mark Warner, the most senior Democrat on the committee, summed up the concerns, pointing to Mr Trump’s repeated admiration for Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, during the campaign and the continuing federal investigat­ion. “What we didn’t know was, at the same time that this investigat­ion was proceeding, the president himself appears to have been engaged in an effort to influence, or at least coopt, the director of the FBI,” he said. “The testimony that Mr Comey has submitted for today’s hearing is very disturbing.” Democrats have tried to talk down the prospect of impeachmen­t. Removing the president from office, they say, is difficult when Republican­s control Congress.

Jonathan Turley, a law professor at George Washington University, said nothing he heard in Mr Comey’s statement so far convinced him that the president breached the law by interferin­g with a federal investigat­ion.

“We do not indict people for being boorish or clueless.”

Mr Trump’s allies tried to undermine Mr Comey’s credibilit­y ahead of his testimony, suggesting he enjoyed the limelight, and paying for TV adverts that questioned his record.

 ?? Zach Gibson / Bloomberg ?? Former FBI director James Comey at the senate intelligen­ce committee hearing in Washington.
Zach Gibson / Bloomberg Former FBI director James Comey at the senate intelligen­ce committee hearing in Washington.
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