The Columbus Dispatch

Trump’s anger at Mueller grows

- By Shannon Pettypiece and Chris Strohm

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump sat with Robert Mueller in the Oval Office in May of last year to interview him for a job: director of the FBI.

The next afternoon, Trump was in another Oval Office meeting when an aide interrupte­d with news that Mueller had taken a different post: special counsel to investigat­e Trump’s campaign.

Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who attended both meetings, were blindsided, according to a person familiar with both meetings. The president immediatel­y blasted Sessions for not knowing the announceme­nt was coming and challenged how the person he’d just interviewe­d for the FBI job — and who Trump said had a past dispute with him over golf-club fees — could now be investigat­ing him, the person said.

In recent weeks, Trump’s anger at Mueller — and the president’s allegation­s that the special counsel is biased against him — has broken out in public. On Wednesday, Trump tweeted that Mueller is “totally conflicted.” In late June, Trump asked when Mueller was “going to list his Conflicts of Interest.”

“If a guy just turned you down for a job, it certainly creates a question as to whether you could be perfectly objective in making an important decision about that person,” said Trump’s lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, who said there are additional conflicts the legal team is aware of but not making public.

It’s not clear whether Trump turned down Mueller for the job before the special counsel’s appointmen­t, but from that moment on, Trump has complained to aides about a perceived grudge.

Sessions was so rattled by the president’s anger in that interrupte­d Oval Office meeting that he resigned verbally that day and later submitted a formal letter of resignatio­n, according to the person briefed on the meeting. The Justice Department declined a request for comment.

Mueller, a decorated Vietnam War veteran and registered Republican who led the FBI in the days after the Sept. 11 attacks, has been praised for his unimpeacha­ble character by both Republican­s and Democrats.

Those who have worked with Mueller say his work wouldn’t be influenced by any past disputes with Trump. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who appointed Mueller and supervises his investigat­ion, has testified he is unaware of any conflicts of interest that would disqualify Mueller from the job.

Trump’s complaints to his advisers have centered around an alleged dispute over golf fees from a decade ago. Trump has told colleagues that Mueller tried to get a refund for fees he’d paid to Trump’s National Golf Club in Northern Virginia after he resigned as a member in 2011, former White House advisers said. Trump has said he got into a contentiou­s exchange with Mueller over the issue.

A spokesman for Mueller previously told The Washington Post that there was no dispute when Mueller, who was FBI director at the time, left the club. Mueller’s office declined a request for comment.

For months, those close to Trump tried to tamp down his concerns, assuring him Mueller would conduct a fair investigat­ion and not be swayed by an old fight over golf club payments or being turned down for a job he already held for 12 years.

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