Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Time for ‘you’re fired’?

- HARRY LITMAN

Rumors are flying that President Trump will try to fire special counsel Robert Mueller by year’s end. Although this nightmaris­h prospect can’t be counted as likely, and Trump insists he’s not contemplat­ing it, there are several reasons why he will not see a better time to lower the boom— and the White House has surely taken them into account.

First, there are strong signs that Mueller may soon indict Jared Kushner, the president’s sonin-law and adviser. Kushner’s lawyer has been quietly shopping for a crisis response team of the sort brought on board for criminal prosecutio­ns.

Second, the coordinate­d onslaught against the FBI and Justice Department from Capitol Hill lends Trump a measure of cover for moving to shut down the investigat­ion.

Third, Congress is about to leave town for Christmas break, leaving Washington at its sleepiest and least prepared for a nimble response.

Fourth, Trump’s lawyers have scheduled a meeting with Mueller’s team soon, and the script has already been written. Trump’s team will ask about the progress of the investigat­ion and when it will end; Mueller’s side will respond that there has been progress but there is still much to do and they cannot estimate an end date. Trump will then have his rabble-rousing talking point.

For months, Trump’s lawyers and the White House staff have been claiming that, as Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders reiterated just last week, “[w]e expect this process to wrap up soon.” There never was any basis for the expectatio­n, which experience­d prosecutor­s would find ludicrous, other than to set up a public argument that the inquiry has gone on too long and needs to be shut down.

There is one glaring problem with that position, which is that it is hard to see how the process can wrap up to the public’s satisfacti­on without testimony of some sort from Trump. But Trump’s lawyers may have concluded that he should avoid the expected reckoning with a skillful questioner, given the multiple, contradict­ory accounts of key events he has provided to date. The very best he could hope for would be the worst day of his public life, made to look like a doddering fool and forced into a refrain of “I don’t recall”s. Or he might answer some questions and expose himself to perjury.

If Trump does move to fire Mueller, we can’t count on immediate consequenc­es.

He would first have to find someone at the Justice Department willing to be remembered as his political stooge. And he would have to force the resignatio­ns of everyone above that person. It might be years before the department is able to regain its full footing.

The focus, then, would turn to Congress. It’s possible lawmakers could reconstitu­te the investigat­ion in some hobbled fashion, but the effort would take many months. And any attempt to actually remove the president from office would need to secure the support of 15 or so Senate Republican­s, which still seems highly unlikely.

Crippled in public support and exposed as a boor and a rogue, Trump may yet survive to the end of his term—a feat he’ll define as “winning,” always his paramount concern. As he memorably promised the country more than a year ago, “we’re going to win so much, you’re going to be sick and tired of winning.”

Harry Litman, a former United States attorney and deputy assistant attorney general, teaches at UCLA Law School.

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