The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Lieberman, 3 others vie to be FBI chief
Former senator headlines group of candidates.
President Donald Trump met Wednesday with four candidates to succeed James Comey as FBI director, including former Sen. Joe Lieberman, White House press secretary Sean Spicer said.
In addition to Lieberman, the president met with former Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keating, who worked previously as a U.S. attorney and as the No. 3 official in the Justice Department; Richard McFeely, a former FBI official who spent more than two decades in the bureau; and acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe, who has taken over for Comey in the short term.
Last Saturday, top Justice Department officials interviewed eight people. A Justice Department official said Attorney General Jeff Sessions has met with them. It was not immediately clear how many candidates Trump plans to interview before making a nomination.
Trump has said he could make a “fast decision” on who will take over the top role at the nation’s premier law enforcement agency — perhaps even deciding before he leaves for a foreign trip Friday. The position is particularly important because the FBI is leading the investigation of Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election and of possible coordination between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin to influence the outcome.
Whoever Trump picks will have to win Senate confirmation, and that will likely require demonstrating a willingness to be independent from Trump. Comey alleged in a memo — the details of which were made public Tuesday — that Trump asked him to shut down an FBI investigation into former national security adviser Michael Flynn. Trump fired Comey from his post last week and has denied making any such request.
Of those on the latest list, Lieberman might be the most controversial — even though he identified as a Democrat for most of his political career and was even the party’s nominee for vice president in 2000. He ran unsuccessfully for president in 2004, and became an independent in 2006.
Legislators on both sides of the aisle have expressed wariness about having a politician lead the FBI.
Lieberman was Connecticut’s attorney general decades ago.
As a former governor, Keating could also be considered a politician, but he also has Justice Department credentials, having worked as an FBI agent, U.S. attorney and associate attorney general.
McFeely only retired from the FBI in 2014; most recently, he led the Criminal, Cyber, Response, and Services Branch. He was the lead case agent on the Oklahoma City federal building bombing in 1995, when Keating was governor, and he was the FBI’s on-scene commander after the Sept. 11, 2001, attack on the Pentagon.
McCabe seems an unlikely choice. He has contradicted the White House on a number of critical issues and asserted that he considered the probe of possible coordination between the Kremlin and the Trump team during the 2016 election campaign a “highly significant investigation.”
But he also said there had been “no effort to impede our investigation to date” — which would seem to be good news for a White House that now faces suggestions that the president might have attempted to obstruct justice.