The Denver Post

Trump says everything he’s done is proper

- By Jill Colvin

THURMONT, MD.» President Donald Trump said Saturday that “everything I’ve done is 100 percent proper” regarding the special counsel’s investigat­ion of Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. election, and he insisted that his campaign didn’t collude with Moscow or commit any crime.

His team has been “open” with special counsel Robert Mueller and “done nothing wrong,” Trump told reporters at Camp David, where he was meeting with Republican congressio­nal leaders and Cabinet members to discuss legislativ­e strategy in the new year.

He bemoaned the unrelentin­g focus on alleged Russia ties, saying the probe is “very, very bad for our country.

“It’s making our country look foolish and this is a country that I don’t want looking foolish, and it’s not going to look foolish as long as I’m here.”

A number of news outlets, including The Associated Press, have reported that Trump directed his White House counsel to tell Attorney General Jeff Sessions not to withdraw from the Justice Department’s investigat­ion into potential ties between Russia and the Trump campaign.

Sessions’ decision to step away prompted Mueller’s appointmen­t.

Trump told reporters at Camp David that The New York Times story first reporting the request was “way off, or at least off” — though he wouldn’t say how.

He added: “Everything that I’ve done is 100 percent proper. That’s what I do, is I do things properly.”

Despite his anger over Sessions’ withdrawal from the investigat­ion, Trump said he stands by the embattled Sessions, a vocal and loyal supporter of his election bid.

The investigat­ion into possible coordinati­on between the Trump campaign and Russia already includes a close look at whether Trump’s actions as president constitute an effort to impede that investigat­ion. Those actions include the firing of FBI Director James Comey, an allegation by Comey that Trump encouraged him to end an investigat­ion into former national security adviser Michael Flynn, and the president’s role in drafting an incomplete and potentiall­y misleading statement about a 2016 meeting with Russians.

The latest revelation, that Trump directed White House counsel Don Mcgahn to tell Sessions not to step aside from the Russia investigat­ion, is known to Mueller’s investigat­ors, who have interviewe­d many current and former executive branch officials.

Three people familiar with the matter confirmed to The Associated Press that Mcgahn spoke with Sessions just before he announced his recusal to urge him not to do so. One of the people said Mcgahn contacted Sessions at the president’s behest.

It remains unclear whether Mueller’s team has evidence to establish that the president’s collective actions were done with the corrupt intent needed to prove obstructio­n of justice.

Trump and his lawyers have repeatedly maintained that he did nothing improper and that, as president, he had unequivoca­l authority to fire Comey and to take other actions.

They may also argue that the president was empowered to want the attorney general he appointed to oversee the Justice Department’s Russian meddling investigat­ion or, as Mcgahn contended to Sessions, that there was no basis or reason at that time for the attorney general to recuse himself.

In stepping aside from the probe on March 2, Sessions said it was not appropriat­e for him to oversee any investigat­ion into a campaign of which he was an active supporter.

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