The Day

Trump: Comey ‘untruthful slime ball’

President blasts former FBI director over book

- By ZEKE MILLER and JONATHAN LEMIRE

Washington — President Donald Trump laced into James Comey as an “untruthful slime ball” on Friday as the White House and the national Republican Party mounted a withering counteratt­ack against the former FBI director and his stinging new memoir.

Comey is embarking on a publicity rollout of his book, “A Higher Loyalty,” which offers his version of the highly controvers­ial events surroundin­g his firing by Trump and the Russia and Hillary Clinton email investigat­ions. In the book, Comey compares Trump to a mob boss demanding loyalty, suggests he’s unfit to lead and mocks the president’s appearance.

Press secretary Sarah Sanders stood at the White House podium Friday and called Comey “a liar and a leaker” whose loyalty is “only to himself,” adding that Comey will “be forever known as a disgraced partisan hack.”

Reading from notes, she declared, “This is nothing more than a poorly executed PR stunt by Comey to desperatel­y rehabilita­te his tattered reputation and enrich his own bank account by peddling a book that belongs on the bargain bin of the fiction section.”

Anticipati­ng broad media attention for Comey as his book tour gets underway, Sanders scolded reporters in advance for preparing to “cover it endlessly, all day today, all day tomorrow, and my guess is every day next week with very little time given to the issues that people care about.”

Unlike Michael Wolff’s “Fire & Fury,” which caught the White House unawares when it was published in January, the administra­tion had weeks to polish its rebuttal rhetoric for Comey’s book. Officials responded to the Wolff book by belatedly pointing out factual inaccuraci­es. In responding to Comey, the White House is choosing not to engage on specific claims, which have been reviewed by lawyers for accuracy, instead launching a broadside effort to undermine Comey’s credibilit­y.

Sanders accused Comey of leaking classified informatio­n and breaking his “sacred trust with the president of the United States, the dedicated agents of the FBI and the American people.”

The Republican National Committee helped with the pushback effort against Comey by launching a website and supplying surrogates with talking points that question his credibilit­y.

Comey acknowledg­ed in congressio­nal testimony last year that after he was fired he helped leak his personal, but unclassifi­ed, memos of his conversati­ons with Trump to a reporter. In previous testimony, however, he said he never authorized an FBI subordinat­e to leak informatio­n about investigat­ions of Trump or Clinton.

White House aides said Sanders’ barrage at Comey reflected Trump’s anger and that Trump was pleased by her performanc­e. Sanders explained Trump’s heated response to the book by attacking the media for giving Comey a platform, saying the president “has every right to call out that individual that you guys are propping up.”

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