Sessions recuses himself from inquiry
Amid resignation calls, AG says he won’t take part in investigations into Russian meddling in 2016 election
WASHINGTON — Attorney General Jeff Sessions, facing a storm of criticism over newly disclosed contacts with the Russian ambassador to the United States, recused himself on Thursday from any investigation into charges that Russia meddled in the 2016 presidential election.
His announcement, delivered at a terse news conference, came after a day of rapid-fire developments in a murky affair that has shadowed President Donald Trump, jeopardized his closest aides and intensified pressure for a full inquiry into Moscow’s attempts to influence the election, as well as the policies of the new administration.
Many top Democrats demanded Sessions’ resignation, and a growing number of Republicans declared that he should not take part in any investigation into the case, given his own still largely unexplained role in it.
But Trump stoutly defended Sessions, one of his few early champions on Capitol Hill. “He could have stated his response more accurately, but it was clearly not intentional,” he said in a statement, which accused Democrats of engaging in “a total witch hunt.”
Sessions insisted there was nothing nefarious about his two meetings with the Russian ambassador, Sergey Kislyak, even though he did not disclose them to the Senate during his confirmation hearing and they occurred during the heat of the race between Hillary Clinton, the Democratic nominee, and Trump, whom Sessions was advising on national security.
In his account on Thursday of the more substantive meeting, which took place in his Senate office on Sept. 8, Sessions described Kislyak as one of a parade of envoys who seek out lawmakers like him to glean information about U.S. policies and promote the agendas of their governments.
“Somehow, the subject of Ukraine came up,” Sessions said, recalling that the meeting grew testy after the ambassador defended Russia’s conduct toward its neighbor and heaped blame on everybody else. “I thought he was pretty much of an old-style, Soviet-type ambassador,” Sessions said, noting that he declined a lunch invitation from Kislyak.
Sessions’ decision to recuse himself was one of his first public acts as attorney general. He said he made the decision after consulting with officials at the Justice Department, and he denied misleading Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., when he said in his confirmation hearing that he had not met with Russian officials about the Trump campaign.
“In retrospect,” Session told reporters, “I should have slowed down and said, ‘But I did meet one Russian official a couple of times, and that would be the ambassador.’ ”
The latest disclosures — and the Trump administration’s contradictory accounts of them — have deepened the questions about Russia’s role in the election and its aftermath. It has fueled calls for congressional and independent investigations, and toppled another close Trump aide, Michael Flynn, who resigned as national security adviser last month after admitting he had misled the administration over his contacts with Kislyak.
On Thursday, the White House confirmed that Flynn had his own previously undisclosed meeting with the ambassador in December to “establish a line of communication” between the incoming administration and the Russian government. Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and now a senior adviser, also participated in the meeting at Trump Tower.
The extent and frequency of the Flynn Kislyak contacts remains unclear. But news of the meeting added to the emerging picture of how the relationship between Trump’s team and Moscow evolved to include some of the Trump’s most trusted advisers.
Two other Trump campaign advisers also reportedly spoke with Kislyak last year at an event on the sidelines of the Republican National Convention.
Carter Page, a businessman and early Trump foreign policy adviser, told MSNBC on Thursday, “I’m not going to deny that I talked to him,” but said in an earlier statement that he would not comment about the event, which was off the record. Additionally, J.D. Gordon, a retired naval officer who advised Trump on national security, told USA Today that he had had an “informal conversation” with Kislyak, and played down its importance.