San Francisco Chronicle

Trump ex-strategist calls firing of FBI Director biggest mistake “maybe in modern political history.”

- By Fred Barbash Fred Barbash is a Washington Post writer.

Former White House strategist Stephen Bannon believes the firing of FBI Director James Comey by President Trump was the biggest mistake “maybe in modern political history.”

Bannon made the statement during an online segment of his interview with “60 Minutes” broadcast Sunday. The statement was extraordin­ary considerin­g all the political mistakes made in “modern history,” including but not limited to the Watergate cover-up by President Richard Nixon and the related Saturday Night Massacre, the Iran-Contra affair during the administra­tion of President Ronald Reagan and President Bill Clinton’s dalliance with Monica Lewinsky.

“I don’t think there’s any doubt that if James Comey had not been fired,” Bannon told interviewe­r Charlie Rose, “we would not have a special counsel.”

“We would not have the Mueller investigat­ion in the breadth that clearly Mr. Mueller is going,” he added, referring to special counsel Robert Mueller’s appointmen­t to investigat­e any possible connection between Trump or his campaign with Russian meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Mueller was appointed by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein on May 17 in the wake of Comey’s dismissal by Trump on May 9. People familiar with the probe have told the Washington Post that Mueller’s team is looking at the decision to fire Comey, which some have argued could be interprete­d by prosecutor­s as part of an effort to obstruct justice.

Bannon’s comment supplement­ed a broader on-air “60 Minutes” interview that also included some eye-opening claims, such as saying that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky, and House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., were “trying to nullify the 2016 election.” It came as Rose pressed him on the Comey firing, telling the former Trump adviser that he had heard that Bannon had declared the firing the worst mistake in political history. Bannon described that as “too bombastic” an assertion, narrowing it to “modern political history.”

Washington, said Bannon, “is a city of institutio­ns, not individual­s. And I think you have to look at it as institutio­ns. The FBI is the institutio­n. The speaker of the House is an institutio­n. The majority leader is an institutio­n. OK? The Justice Department is an institutio­n. They have an institutio­nal logic of how they proceed and what they’re going to do. And you can’t get caught up in individual­s.”

 ?? Olivier Douliery / Tribune News Service ?? Former strategist Steve Bannon (left) joins Jared Kushner at a Cabinet meeting at the White House in June. In a “60 Minutes” interview, Bannon was unsparing in his criticism of the GOP.
Olivier Douliery / Tribune News Service Former strategist Steve Bannon (left) joins Jared Kushner at a Cabinet meeting at the White House in June. In a “60 Minutes” interview, Bannon was unsparing in his criticism of the GOP.

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