Los Angeles Times

Ouster could worsen Trump’s troubles

- By David Lauter

WASHINGTON — In firing FBI Director James B. Comey, President Trump may have hoped to bring the investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election under control. Instead, as reaction in Washington spread on Wednesday, the move seemed to carry a large risk of making his troubles worse.

Trump has both privately and publicly seethed for weeks about the investigat­ion into whether anyone connected with his campaign had cooperated with Russian efforts to influence the election.

He was angered further last week that Comey would not publicly back his claim that no evidence of collusion exists.

“The Russia-Trump collusion story is a total hoax” and a “taxpayer funded charade,” he tweeted on Monday, the day White House officials now say he first discussed firing Comey with Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions and Deputy Atty. Gen. Rod Rosenstein.

But if the goal was to get the investigat­ion over with, firing Comey probably moved matters in the wrong direction, according to both

Republican and Democratic former White House officials.

“In the short term it certainly fans the flames,” said Ed Rogers, a longtime Republican strategist and aide to former Republican presidents.

In an email lament circulated among prominent Republican­s, A.B. Culvahouse Jr., former Reagan White House counsel and head of Trump’s vice presidenti­al search effort, said the firing “both prolongs the FBI/DOJ investigat­ion and undermines the credibilit­y of the Trump campaign’s denials of no conspiracy with Putin.”

“We could be talking about Russian hacking in the mid-terms at this rate,” he wrote.

Ironically, Comey’s track record for defying his bosses and charting an independen­t course — precisely the attributes that the White House cited in his dismissal — made him potentiall­y very valuable to Trump.

Susan Hennessey, an expert in national security law at the Brookings Institutio­n who has been closely tracking the Russia investigat­ion, said Trump appeared to have lost sight of what would have been the best-case ending to the public investigat­ion — clearing those who are innocent and allowing the White House to move forward.

“It’s apparent to everyone except perhaps the president that this story is not just going to go away,” she said.

Although high-profile investigat­ions can be politicall­y costly to an administra­tion, they’re often the only way to “dispense with the matter publicly” and “provide the level of certainty that the American people need.”

Comey, with his long service under presidents of both parties and his wide support among rank-andfile FBI agents, could have provided credible closure at the end of an investigat­ion, especially if the inquiry were to clear most White House officials.

That’s why Hennessey and others predicted that eventually, despite current resistance, the administra­tion would probably have to accept some form of special counsel or independen­t investigat­ive commission.

“These issues are serious enough that I think eventually we’ll get there,” said Lee Hamilton, a former congressma­n and co-chairman of the commission that investigat­ed the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

“Will it be next week? Will it be six months from now? I don’t know when, but I don’t think Trump has helped himself by firing Comey,” Hamilton said.

“He’s trying to get away from this. It’s driving him nuts. It’s eating away at his presidency day by day, and he’s trying to stop it. But my view is he’s not going to succeed.”

Demands for a special prosecutor of some form probably will play a major role in Senate hearings over a nominee to replace Comey.

So far, the administra­tion has staunchly resisted that idea, and it has kept the backing of the people it needs most, especially Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

“Today we’ll no doubt hear calls for a new investigat­ion,” McConnell said in a Senate speech Wednesday morning. That “can only serve to impede the current work being done.”

So long as McConnell stands firm, he could probably block any move in Congress to pass a new law creating an independen­t counsel of the type that investigat­ed the Iran-Contra scandal in the Ronald Reagan administra­tion and Bill Clinton’s sexual escapades and perjury during his administra­tion.

The remaining route to a special counsel would be for Rosenstein to appoint one, using his authority as the overseer of the Russia investigat­ion because Sessions has stepped aside over his close links to Trump during the campaign. That was the process used when a special counsel was named in the George W. Bush administra­tion to investigat­e who in the White House had disclosed the identity of Valerie Plame, a covert CIA agent.

Much as Sessions resisted for several weeks before eventually deciding to recuse himself from the Russia investigat­ion, “we will see the same cycle play out with Rod Rosenstein,” Hennessey predicted.

“We’re on an inevitable path toward things like special prosecutor­s” because otherwise “we’re facing a legitimacy crisis,” she said.

In trying to fend that off, the White House suffered Wednesday from a problem that already has surfaced several times during Trump’s tenure: The president’s decision appeared to have outrun his staff’s preparatio­n.

White House officials, nearly all of whom were caught by surprise by Comey’s firing, were illequippe­d to explain Trump’s action, offering conf licting accounts of when he made the decision and what had precipitat­ed it.

On Tuesday night, for example, several hours after the firing, White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer told reporters that “no one from the White House” had ordered Rosenstein to review Comey’s conduct.

“It was all him,” Spicer said. “That was a DoJ decision.”

On Wednesday, White House Deputy Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who delivered the administra­tion’s daily news briefing, offered a very different account, one that appeared to put Trump in the role of the motivating force.

“The president, over the last several months, lost confidence in Director Comey,” Sanders said. She went on to say that when Rosenstein and Sessions came to the White House on Monday, “the topic came up, and they asked to speak with the president, and that’s how it moved forward.”

Trump “asked them for their recommenda­tion” then “asked them to put that recommenda­tion in writing,” she said. Rosenstein’s memo castigatin­g Comey was dated Tuesday.

Those sorts of inconsiste­ncies dismayed Republican­s even as they heightened suspicions among Democrats.

“I am bewildered about the sloppy handling of this at the White House. It makes Republican­s’ shoulders slump,” said Rogers, the Republican strategist.

On the Democratic side, prominent figures insisted Trump’s true motive had been to undermine the Russia investigat­ion, and not, as claimed, Comey’s fumbling of the 2016 investigat­ion into Hillary Clinton’s email practices.

“If the administra­tion truly had objections to the way Director Comey handled the Clinton investigat­ion, they would’ve had them the minute the president got into office,” Sen. Charles E. Schumer of New York, the Democratic leader, said in a floor speech Wednesday morning.

At least some Republican­s seemed troubled, as well.

“I’ve spent the last several hours trying to find an acceptable rationale for the timing of Comey’s firing. I just can’t do it,” Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) tweeted Tuesday night.

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