The Mercury News

Trump denies report that he ordered Mueller fired

- By Tom Lobianco

WASHINGTON >> President Donald Trump demanded the firing of special counsel Robert Mueller last June but backed down after White House lawyer Don McGahn threatened to resign, according to a New York Times report that Trump quickly dismissed Friday as “fake news.”

The newspaper reported that Trump demanded Mueller’s firing just weeks after the special counsel was first appointed by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.

Trump pushed back against the report, without addressing the specific allegation, as he arrived at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d on Friday.

McGahn said he would not deliver the order to the Justice Department, according to The Times, which cites four people familiar with the request by the president.

Trump argued at the time that Mueller could not be fair because of a dispute over golf club fees that he said Mueller owed at a Trump golf club in Sterling, Virginia. The president also believed Mueller had a conflict of interest because he worked for the same law firm that was representi­ng Trump’s sonin-law and adviser Jared Kushner.

Peter Carr, a spokesman for Mueller, did not immediatel­y return a call for comment Thursday night. Ty Cobb, a White House lawyer working on the response to the Russia probe, declined comment Thursday night.

The response from Democrats was nearly immediate. Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligen­ce, said that if the report in The Times is true, Trump has crossed a “red line.”

“Any attempt to remove the Special Counsel, pardon key witnesses or otherwise interfere in the investigat­ion would be a gross abuse of power, and all members of Congress, from both parties, have a responsibi­lity to our Constituti­on and to our country to make that clear immediatel­y,” Warner said.

The report comes as Mueller moves closer to interviewi­ng Trump. The president said Wednesday that he would gladly testify under oath — but a White House official quickly said afterward that Trump did not mean he was volunteeri­ng to testify.

Last June, the special counsel had yet to call on any major witnesses to testify and had not yet issued any charges or signed any plea deals. But that would change just a few months later, when federal agents would arrest former Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoul­os and ultimately turn him into a cooperatin­g witness.

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