Imperial Valley Press

Ready to fight, Trump says he’ll watch ‘a little’ of Mueller

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NEW YORK (AP) — He won’t watch. Well, maybe just a little bit.

President Donald Trump on Monday feigned indifferen­ce to Robert Mueller’s upcoming congressio­nal testimony, an eyebrow-raising claim for a media-obsessed president who has been concerned for months about the potential impact of the former special counsel’s appearance.

Much of Washington will stop in its tracks Wednesday as Mueller testifies on Capitol Hill for at least five hours, a nationally televised event that for many Americans will be their first detailed exposure to the former special counsel’s findings on Russia’s 2016 election interferen­ce.

The Justice Department on Monday told Mueller his testimony should not go beyond informatio­n that has already been released publicly.

Trump told reporters in the Oval Office: “I’m not going to be watching — probably — maybe I’ll see a little bit of it. I’m not going to be watching Mueller because you can’t take all those bites out of the apple.”

That was a shift from Friday, when Trump insisted that he would not watch any of Mueller’s back-toback appearance­s before two House committees.

Either way, the president has continued to wage war on the former special counsel’s credibilit­y, sending out a series of tweets Monday in which he deemed Mueller, without evidence, “highly conflicted” and said that “in the end it will be bad for him and the phony Democrats in Congress who have done nothing but waste time on this ridiculous Witch Hunt.”

Trump’s Twitter account may well be the main vehicle for the White House to respond to Mueller’s testimony.

Though the probe did not establish charges of criminal conspiracy or obstructio­n, there has been growing concern among those close to the president that Mueller’s appearance could push undecided or reluctant Democrats toward impeachmen­t. Even so, there appears to be little evidence of an organized White House response plan to the hearings.

The president has a light schedule Wednesday morning, when Mueller begins speaking, before heading to West Virginia for evening fundraiser­s. The TVs aboard Air Force One are likely to be tuned to coverage of the hearings, and the president is expected to watch or be briefed on most of the proceeding­s, according to four administra­tion officials and Republican­s close to the White House. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss internal plans.

When Mueller was originally scheduled to appear last Wednesday, before a one-week postponeme­nt, the president’s campaign scheduled a rally that night in North Carolina so Trump could offer a rebuttal. That won’t happen this time, though the president’s personal attorneys, including Rudy Giuliani, may issue their own statements, and talking points could be circulated among conservati­ves.

There is also an expectatio­n within the White House that House Republican­s will pepper Mueller with tough questions, though they may be less comfortabl­e taking a swipe at the decorated war hero from the chambers rather than via Twitter or Fox News.

White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham has yet to make an on-camera appearance after nearly a month in the job. But Kellyanne Conway, senior counselor to the president, previewed the attack lines Monday.

“Well, I want the taxpayers to see the way the Democratic Congress is spending their money day in and day out. A do-over of the do-over of the doover,” Conway said on Fox News. “Now they want Bob Mueller, they want to drag him before Congress and have him read out loud. Bob Mueller book on tape, courtesy of the taxpayer, I don’t think so. They also think you’re stupid, America, that you can’t read the report for yourself.”

The nation has heard the special counsel speak only once — for nine minutes — since his appointmen­t in May 2017.

This time, the House Judiciary Committee and the House Intelligen­ce Committee will question Mueller in separate hearings on the report. Judiciary panel Democrats planned to practice with a mock hearing behind closed doors Tuesday, according to two people who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were unauthoriz­ed to publicly discuss the planning.

Mueller plans to begin with an opening statement that a spokesman said would be similar in substance to his May 29 statement from the Justice Department podium. In that statement, he cautioned Congress that he would not go beyond the text of the report if called upon to testify and explained his team’s decision to neither seek an indictment of the president nor exonerate him on obstructio­n of justice allegation­s.

Responding to a request from Mueller about limitation­s or potential privilege issues, a senior Justice Department official, Bradley Weinsheime­r, told Mueller in a letter that the department expects that he will not stray beyond his report when he testifies. Weinsheime­r also told Mueller that he should not discuss the redacted portions of his report or the actions of people who were not charged.

 ?? AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI ?? President donald trump speaks during the “Presidenti­al social media summit” in the east room of the white house, on July 11 in washington.
AP PHOTO/EVAN VUCCI President donald trump speaks during the “Presidenti­al social media summit” in the east room of the white house, on July 11 in washington.

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