Boston Herald

Trump postpones meeting with Deputy AG Rosenstein

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WASHINGTON — A highly anticipate­d meeting between President Trump and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein was postponed until next week to avoid conflictin­g with a dramatic Senate hearing involving Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, the White House said yesterday.

The two were set to meet yesterday following news media reports that Rosenstein last year discussed possibly secretly recording the president and using the Constituti­on’s 25th Amendment to remove him from office.

But White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the men agreed to reschedule their meeting because “they do not want to do anything to interfere with the hearing.”

Amid speculatio­n that the meeting could result in Rosenstein’s dismissal or resignatio­n, Trump said Wednesday that he would “certainly prefer not” to fire Rosenstein and that the Justice Department’s No. 2 official had denied making the remarks first attributed to him in a New York Times report.

“I would much prefer keeping Rod Rosenstein,” Trump said at a news conference in New York. “He said he did not say it. He said he does not believe that. He said he has a lot of respect for me, and he was very nice and we’ll see.”

Trump added, “My preference would be to keep him and to let him finish up.”

White House counselor Kellyanne Conway would not say yesterday when the meeting would take place, but stressed that the two will talk and Trump has made clear “he would prefer that the deputy attorney general stay on the job and complete the job.”

Rosenstein is overseeing special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election, and his dismissal would put that probe in jeopardy and create a political storm.

The meeting delay prolongs the uncertaint­y of Rosenstein’s status. Rosenstein headed to the White House on Monday morning preparing to be fired and had discussed a possible resignatio­n over the weekend with White House officials. But after meeting with chief of staff John Kelly and speaking by phone with Trump, he got a reprieve with the Trump meeting scheduled for yesterday.

Since then, the White House has sought to tamp down anxiety that Rosenstein would be fired.

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