Chicago Sun-Times

TAKING IT TO TRUMP

Interim head of the FBI undercuts White House claims on Comey, probe

- BY ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — In ways both overt and subtle, the acting director of the FBI on Thursday undermined White House explanatio­ns for the firing of former Director James Comey and contradict­ed the administra­tion’s characteri­zations of an investigat­ion into potential coordinati­on between Russia and the Trump campaign to influence the presidenti­al election.

Andrew McCabe, testifying before Congress in place of his fired boss, told lawmakers a counterint­elligence investigat­ion that a White House spokeswoma­n dismissed a day earlier as “one of the smallest things” on the FBI’s plate was actually “highly significan­t.” And though the White House has asserted Comey lost the backing of rank- and- file agents, McCabe flatly said, “that is not accurate.”

“I can tell you that the majority, the vast majority of FBI employees, enjoyed a deep and positive connection to Director Comey,” said McCabe, who called it the “greatest privilege and honor in my profession­al life to work with him.” Comey, he added, “enjoyed broad support within the FBI and still does to this day.”

McCabe’s testimony undercut a White House narrative that has evolved in the two days since Comey was ousted. The White House initially said President Donald Trump made the call at the recommenda­tion of the top two officials at the Justice Department, but in an NBC News interview that aired Thursday, the president said he would have fired Comey even without the recommenda­tion.

Testifying before the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, McCabe repeatedly — and at times bluntly — rejected some of the claims the White House has used to explain the firing and to describe the investigat­ion.

In one of the more dramatic exchanges, he was asked whether the investigat­ion was — as White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders maintained Wednesday — a small investigat­ion in relation to the other work the FBI is conducting.

“Sir,” he told Sen. Angus King of Maine, “we consider it to be a highly significan­t investigat­ion.”

MORE COVERAGE IN USA TODAY, PAGE 28

He also said he would refrain from discussing the investigat­ion with the White House, pledged to report to the committee any efforts to interfere in it and said the dismissal of the director would do nothing to impede the probe.

“You cannot stop the men and women of the FBI from doing the right thing,” he declared.

Trump maintains Comey told him that he was not under investigat­ion, but McCabe suggested under questionin­g that was highly improbable.

He refused to comment on what Comey did or didn’t say, but when asked whether it would be common for an FBI director to notify someone they were not the target of an investigat­ion, said “I’m not aware of that being a standard practice.”

McCabe’s willingnes­s to cut against White House talking points may reflect an understand­ing that he may not serve for long as acting director. The Justice Department seemed to be laying the groundwork for that possibilit­y even before his congressio­nal appearance, with leaders there interviewi­ng four other candidates for the interim job Wednesday.

McCabe, a career FBI agent who ran the Washington field office and oversaw national security investigat­ions out of headquarte­rs, was a target of Trump’s on the campaign trail following reports that his wife had accepted campaign donations from a close ally of Hillary Clinton during a failed bid for the state Senate.

 ??  ?? Acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, D. C., on Thursday before the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee hearing on major threats facing the U. S.
| JACQUELYN MARTIN/ AP
Acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, D. C., on Thursday before the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee hearing on major threats facing the U. S. | JACQUELYN MARTIN/ AP

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