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McConnell foils effort to shield Mueller

Some in GOP bristle at creating political crisis with Trump amid bipartisan effort

- By Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Tuesday thwarted a bipartisan effort to protect special counsel Robert Mueller’s job, saying he will not hold a floor vote on the legislatio­n even if it is approved next week in the Senate Judiciary Committee.

McConnell said the bill is unnecessar­y because President Donald Trump will not fire Mueller.

“We’ll not be having this on the floor of the Senate,” McConnell said on Fox News.

His comments came amid widespread opposition to the bill among members of his caucus, with several GOP senators saying the bill is unconstitu­tional. Others said it’s simply not good politics to try and tell Trump what to do, likening the legislatio­n to “poking the bear.”

The bipartisan legislatio­n was introduced last week as Trump publicly criticized Mueller, who is investigat­ing potential ties between Russia and Trump’s 2016 campaign as well as possible obstructio­n of justice by the president. Trump, fuming about a raid of his personal lawyer’s office by a different division of the FBI, said last week that the Mueller investigat­ion is “an attack on our country” and is “corrupt.”

Trump has also privately pondered firing Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who is overseeing Mueller’s investigat­ion.

Within a day of Trump’s criticism, Republican­s Thom Tillis of North Carolina and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina combined two bills they introduced last summer to protect special counsels. They introduced the new bill along with Democratic Sens. Chris Coons of Delaware and Cory Booker of New Jersey, and Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley, a Republican, announced that his committee would vote on the bill.

The legislatio­n would give any special counsel a 10-day window to seek expedited judicial review of a firing, and would put into law existing Justice Department regulation­s that require a firing to be for “good cause.”

Democrats immediatel­y jumped on the legislatio­n, but many Republican­s have been cool to it.

At least three of the 11 GOP members of the Judiciary panel have said they will vote against it and another five have said they have questions about its constituti­onality. Grassley is one of those with concerns, but said he felt obligated to hold a vote.

Republican­s off the committee also had questions — and some acknowledg­ed that it could be politicall­y difficult.

South Dakota Sen. Mike Rounds said Tuesday that Trump should make the decision on his own and be responsibl­e for the consequenc­es.

“I think having Congress tell him what we believe he should do in this case is simply poking the bear, and I’d just prefer not to do that,” Rounds said.

Oklahoma Sen. Jim Lankford said the bill is a “political distractio­n.”

Others said there was little point.

“It’s about as popular as cholera with the leader in the Senate, and it’s about as popular as malaria in the House,” said Louisiana Sen. John Kennedy, a member of the Judiciary panel. “I think most people think we’re picking an unnecessar­y fight with the president.”

Coons bristled at the criticism that the legislatio­n is unconstitu­tional, noting that several courts have upheld similar special counsel statutes.

“If I were convinced this were unconstitu­tional, I would not be moving it,” said Coons, a lawyer.

At a September hearing on the two separate bills, before they were combined, scholars were divided on whether the bills were constituti­onal, with some voicing concerns that allowing the judicial branch that authority over an executive decision may not pass muster in the courts.

“I think it’s probably unconstitu­tional and I don’t think there’s any realistic chance that the president will fire Mr. Mueller,” Sen. John Cornyn, the No. 2 Republican in the Senate and the former Texas attorney general, said Tuesday.

McConnell agreed, adding that Trump would never support the legislatio­n.

“Just as a practical matter, even if we pass it, why would he sign it?” McConnell said in the Fox interview.

Republican­s who have talked to the White House almost uniformly have held the line that Trump will not fire Mueller or Rosenstein — including Tillis and Graham, who say they are pushing the legislatio­n because it would be good policy under any president.

“I don’t think he’s going to fire Mueller, but I think institutio­nally it would be nice to have some protection­s,” Graham said Tuesday.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Sen. Mitch McConnell told Fox News: “We’ll not be having this on the floor of the Senate.”
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Sen. Mitch McConnell told Fox News: “We’ll not be having this on the floor of the Senate.”

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