Los Angeles Times

Leave Jeff Sessions alone

- Hen President

WTrump nominated Jeff Sessions to be his attorney general, we were aghast. We called him “the wrong man for the job” because of his retrograde opinions on civil rights, sentencing, immigratio­n and other issues.

So it was not just ironic, but absolutely mind-boggling, that only six months later, we found ourselves defending Sessions when Trump hinted he might be fired. And today, we’re doing so again.

It’s not that we like Sessions any better than we used to, or that we think he’s doing a good job running the Justice Department. But we fear that Trump wants to remove him for one simple reason: to undermine the investigat­ion of possible collusion between Trump’s 2016 campaign and Russia. That must not be allowed to happen.

Sessions’ original sin in Trump’s eyes is that he recused himself from matters connected to the presidenti­al campaign, in which he was a conspicuou­s cheerleade­r for Trump — a decision that paved the way for the appointmen­t of a special counsel and the investigat­ion Trump incessantl­y attacks. Sessions also has enraged Trump by not investigat­ing “Crooked Hillary” and other political opponents.

That was clear in a remarkable exchange last week between the two men. In an interview on Fox News, Trump complained that Sessions “never took control of the Justice Department.” Sessions responded: “I took control of the Department of Justice the day I was sworn in which is why we have had unpreceden­ted success at effectuati­ng the president’s agenda.”

Then Sessions drew a telling distinctio­n between these policy preference­s — on which the president has a right to expect loyalty — and the attorney general’s responsibi­lity to fairly enforce the law: “While I am attorney general, the actions of the Department of Justice will not be improperly influenced by political considerat­ions.”

Trump replied on Twitter, saying: “Jeff, this is GREAT,” but adding, “so look into all of the corruption on the other side.” The question is whether Trump will remove Sessions if he doesn’t take that advice.

Some Republican­s in Congress seem alarmingly willing to let him sack Sessions, arguing that Trump could replace him with someone who’d leave special counsel Robert S. Mueller III unmolested. We’re not convinced. Given Trump’s belief that Mueller’s investigat­ion is a “witch hunt,” why should we expect him to choose a new attorney general (or acting attorney general) who would respect that investigat­ion, or resist entreaties by the president to investigat­e his political opponents? Trump needs to be told that Sessions is fireproof.

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