San Francisco Chronicle

President plans to keep Wray as director of FBI

- By Jennifer Epstein and Chris Strohm Jennifer Epstein and Chris Strohm are Bloomberg News writers.

WASHINGTON — President Biden plans to keep Christophe­r Wray as FBI director, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said after her remarks on Inaugurati­on Day generated confusion about the future of the agency’s leader.

“I caused an unintentio­nal ripple yesterday so wanted to state very clearly President Biden intends to keep FBI Director Wray on in his role and he has confidence in the job he is doing,” Psaki tweeted on Thursday.

Psaki said on Wednesday that she hadn’t spoken with Biden about whether he has confidence in Wray. During the Trump era, such statements were often made about officials whose futures were in doubt.

It’s a sign of Biden’s confidence in the Donald Trump appointee — and a return to preTrump presidenti­al tradition — that the new president will keep the FBI director, who still has six years left in his term.

Trump had threatened to fire Wray, 54, at various points over numerous issues, including the former president’s frustratio­n that U.S. law enforcemen­t officials wouldn’t provide politicall­y damaging informatio­n on Biden’s family.

Hunter Biden, the president’s son, is under federal investigat­ion primarily for his dealings with Chinese businesses, officials said in December. The new president has pledged not to meddle in the investigat­ion. Keeping Wray in place is one way to show he’s letting the probe progress unfettered.

Firing Wray, conversely, would probably have caused an uproar early in Biden’s presidency, echoing the consequenc­es that followed Trump’s firing of thenFBI director James Comey in 2017. In an interview with NBC, Trump said at the time that he was thinking of “this Russia thing,” which he called “a madeup story,” when he fired Comey.

Comey’s removal led to the appointmen­t of special counsel Robert Mueller to investigat­e any ties between Trump’s 2016 campaign and Russia’s efforts to interfere in the election.

Unlike many other Trump appointees, Wray took a lowkey approach and sought to stay out of the public spotlight. He also had the backing of former Attorney General William Barr, who lobbied behind the scenes to keep Wray from being fired.

Wray took over the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion in August 2017 during a turbulent time after Comey’s ouster.

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