Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Comey firing looks like sabotage of probe

President Donald Trump did the nation, himself and his credibilit­y no favors in firing FBI Director James Comey.

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President Donald Trump did the nation and himself no favors in firing FBI Director James Comey.

It’s hard to buy the president’s explanatio­n for Comey’s removal, which strikes us more as a naked effort to sabotage the ongoing investigat­ion into Trump’s campaign’s dealings with Russia.

Yes, the president’s angst with Comey goes back a ways. Comey’s July 2016 exoneratio­n of Hillary Clinton for her wrongheade­d email arrangemen­t angered the blustery billionair­e.

But claiming that Comey’s handling of that investigat­ion was reason enough to fire him collides full on with the fact Trump praised the FBI director for his “guts” in reopening the investigat­ion shortly before Election Day.

And little wonder, as Comey’s actions likely played a role in Trump’s stunning victory.

Had Trump wished to sack Comey over the Clinton emails, he should have done so in his first days on the job, when such a move could have been reasonably accepted without harming the reputation of his office.

His waiting until this week, after so many highprofil­e stories about the Russia investigat­ion, cannot avoid the perception of political interferen­ce in a critical law enforcemen­t investigat­ion.

The charade is complicate­d by the fact that reporters from The New York Times have learned Trump ordered Attorney General Jeff Sessions last week to find a way to oust Comey, and that he did so as more heat from the Russia probe was coming.

Trump certainly wouldn’t have relished the possibilit­y of another day of testimony on the Russia situation.

We’ll never forget Comey’s testimony to Congress flatly refuting Trump’s tinfoil-hat claims about taps on his Trump Tower phones. But more embarrassm­ent is exactly what Trump got with Monday’s damning testimony from former acting Attorney General Sally Yates.

How telling that Trump waited 18 days to act on Yates’ warning that his national security adviser, Michael Flynn, was compromise­d by his Russian involvemen­t — and then only after media reports of the warning surfaced.

But it took Trump less time than a game of golf to act on advice from Sessions and his deputy, Rod Rosenstein, to end Comey’s FBI career.

Then came news Wednesday that in the days before his firing, Comey had the temerity to ask for more resources to aid the Russian probe.

Certainly, Trump is within his rights to fire the director.

But the standard for removing such a high-level law enforcemen­t official has been much higher for past presidents.

Republican­s in Congress should join Democrats in demanding a special prosecutor to settle the Trump-Russia question.

And senators should make sure whomever Trump picks to replace Comey can stand up to the president’s Tricky Dick maneuvers.

Getting to the bottom of the Trump-Russia situation is critical for our nation and for democracie­s around the world.

Trusting the Trump administra­tion to do so, at this point, would be futile .

His waiting until this week, after so many high-profile stories about the Russia investigat­ion, cannot avoid the perception of political interferen­ce in a critical law enforcemen­t investigat­ion.

— Denver Post, Digital First Media

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