The Independent

US President has power to ‘pardon’, claims Trump

The President’s outburst came amid an early-morning Twitter tirade, raising alarm among Democrats and scholars

- RICHARD A. L. WILLIAMS AND CLARK MINDOCK IN NEW YORK

Donald Trump has insisted he has "the complete power to pardon", fuelling speculatio­n he is considerin­g using the device to extricate himself and members of his team from an investigat­ion into collusion with Russia to interfere in the US election. The President made the statement during an early-morning stream of posts on Twitter, saying: "While all agree the U. S. President has the complete power to pardon, why think of that when only crime so far is LEAKS against us. FAKE NEWS."

Although the President's tweet hinted there was no need to use the power at the moment, because nothing wrong had been done, his rhetoric has raised concerns among senior opposition politician­s and academics.

Scholars have raised questions about the scope of the President's legal authority in issuing pardons. If Trump moved to pardon himself sometime in the future, the US Supreme Court might have to decide on the constituti­onality, some have speculated.

Senator Mark Warner, a Democrat who sits on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said: "The possibilit­y that the President is considerin­g pardons at this early stage in these ongoing investigat­ions is extremely disturbing. Pardoning any individual­s who may have been involved would be crossing a fundamenta­l line." A Democratic Party spokespers­on told the BBC that the claims were "extremely disturbing".

Mr Trump has also claimed that leaks regarding Attorney General Jeff Sessions are illegal. A recent report in the Washington Post quotes Justice Department insiders, who say that Mr Sessions met with the former Russian Ambassador to the US Sergey Kislyak during the 2016 campaign and discussed key policy positions toward Russia. Mr Sessions claimed that he had not met with Russians during the campaign; he also later recused himself from oversight of the investigat­ion into Russia's 2016 election influence.

It comes amid mounting pressure on the President and his administra­tion over their alleged links with the Kremlin's purported attempts to influence the vote last November in his favour. On Friday, the White House deputy press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders refused to rule out the possibilit­y that Mr Trump would use his pardon power to shield himself, his family, and his administra­tion from federal lawsuits.

Ms Huckabee Sanders addressed reporters during her first press briefing following the resignatio­n of Sean Spicer, who had announced his resignatio­n as White House press secretary earlier that day. She is reported to be the favourite to take his place. "I'd refer you to the comments that have already been made by the outside counsel," Ms Huckabee Sanders said when asked about the President's position on pardons.

Earlier on Friday, the emergence of Russian court documents seen by Reuters showed that the Russian lawyer who met Donald Trump Jr before his father's election counted the country's FSB security service among her clients for years.

There is no suggestion that Natalia Veselnitsk­aya was an employee of the Russian government or intelligen­ce services, and she has denied having anything to do with the Kremlin. But the fact she represente­d the FSB in a court case prompted intensifie­d questions of the Trump administra­tion.

Following the tweet about his power to pardon, the President embarked on a familiar tirade about Hillary Clinton emails and the sacked FBI director James Comey. He went on to suggest Ms Clinton, the Democratic candidate he defeated to enter the White House, had "deleted (& acid washed) her 33,000 emails".

Mr Trump compared this with the fact his son, Donald Jr "openly gave his e-mails to the media & authoritie­s". Following Mr Trump Jr's release of the emails, it emerged he had done so minutes before the New York Times was due to publish details of their contents.

The President also urged Republican senators to "step up to the plate" in the ongoing but so-far unsuccessf­ul effort to repeal and replace Obamacare.

 ?? (AP) ?? The defiant leader is once again causing political shockwaves using social media
(AP) The defiant leader is once again causing political shockwaves using social media

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