Santa Fe New Mexican

Justice Department official defends Mueller, sees no cause for firing

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WASHINGTON — Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, facing congressio­nal questions about anti-Donald Trump text messages exchanged between two FBI officials assigned to the Russia probe, defended special counsel Robert Mueller on Wednesday and said he had seen no cause to fire him and had not been pressured to do so.

Rosenstein appeared before the House Judiciary Committee one day after the Justice Department provided congressio­nal committees with hundreds of text messages between an FBI counterint­elligence agent assigned to Mueller’s team and an FBI lawyer who was on the same detail.

Those messages, which occurred before Mueller was appointed in May to investigat­e potential coordinati­on between Russia and the Trump campaign, show the officials using words like “idiot” and “loathsome human” to characteri­ze Trump as he was running for president in 2016. One of the officials said in an election night text that the prospect of a Trump victory was “terrifying.”

The messages added to concerns among members of Congress that Mueller’s team is tainted by political bias.

But when Rosenstein was asked by lawmakers if he had seen good cause to fire Mueller, whom he appointed and whose work he oversees, he replied that he had not. Rosenstein also defended the credential­s of Mueller, a former FBI director, and said he was an appropriat­e choice to run the Justice Department’s Russia investigat­ion.

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