The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Trump thrusts US presidency into perilous area with firing

- By Julie Pace

WASHINGTON » With his shocking dismissal of FBI Director James Comey, Donald Trump is propelling the presidency into rarely traversed territory.

His surprise announceme­nt Tuesday flouts decades of presidenti­al deference to the nation’s top law enforcemen­t agency and its independen­ce. It earns Trump the dubious distinctio­n of being the first president since Richard Nixon to fire the official overseeing an investigat­ion involving the commander in chief. And it cements a clear pattern of a man willing to challenge — in dramatic fashion — the institutio­ns created to hold the president accountabl­e.

“That’s why this is unpreceden­ted,” said Michael Beschloss, a presidenti­al historian. “He’s showed signs of not having a great deal of respect for the system by which this investigat­ion has been operating.”

Sen. Richard Burr, the North Carolina Republican who is overseeing one of the congressio­nal investigat­ions into Russia’s election interferen­ce, said: “I am troubled by the timing and reasoning of Comey’s terminatio­n.”

Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., said he’d spent hours trying to find “an acceptable rationale” for Trump’s decision. “I just can’t do it,” he said.

Trump attained his White House goal after a decades-long career in business during which he was accountabl­e to few people other than himself. Thus, he has chafed at the constituti­onally mandated constraint­s on the presidency.

Within days of taking the oath of office, he suddenly fired acting Attorney General Sally Yates — a career Justice Department official — after she refused to defend the White House’s controvers­ial travel and immigratio­n ban. When the federal courts blocked that measure as well, Trump aggressive­ly castigated individual judges as political actors and challenged the court’s role in curbing a president’s policies.

No matter which president originally appoints them — Comey was tapped by Barack Obama in 2013 — almost all FBI directors are allowed to serve out their full 10-year terms under successor commanders in chief. Bill Clinton is the only other president to fire an FBI chief, amid questions about the director’s use of FBI aircraft for personal purposes.

The Trump White House cited Comey’s handling of last year’s investigat­ion into Hillary Clinton’s email practices as the cause for the firing, and, to be sure, Comey left himself vulnerable.

He was widely criticized for heavy-handed and high-profile decisions in the case, particular­ly when he sent a letter to Congress 10 days before the election saying the bureau was looking at new informatio­n related to the inquiry.

He said at the time that the new informatio­n related to emails found on a laptop belonging to the husband of Clinton aide Huma Abedin, the disgraced congressma­n Anthony Weiner.

At the time, Trump praised Comey for having “guts” and doing “the right thing,” statements that complicate his assertion that now, seven months later, Comey’s decisions warranted firing.

Trump’s announceme­nt came as Comey was again facing criticism, this time for telling congressio­nal lawmakers that Abedin had forwarded “hundreds or thousands” of emails to the laptop.

On Tuesday, hours before Trump fired Comey, the FBI told lawmakers that the director was wrong, and Abedin had forwarded only a “small number” of emails.

Although Democrats blame Comey for Clinton’s loss, they are unlikely to accept Trump’s explanatio­n for the firing.

The president has repeatedly dismissed Comey’s Russia investigat­ion — as well as the congressio­nal inquiries — as a “hoax.” He’s also insisted that he is not personally under investigat­ion — asserting Tuesday that Comey told him three times that he was not a target — though the FBI has stated unequivoca­lly that the president’s campaign and his associates are facing scrutiny.

“This is Nixonian,” said Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa.

Jimmy Gurule, a former assistant attorney general who was appointed by President George H.W. Bush, said Trump’s decision “threatens our democracy and undermines the integrity of the FBI investigat­ion.” Gurule is now a law professor at the University of Notre Dame.

Nixon’s decision had a ripple effect throughout his administra­tion, with the attorney general and deputy attorney general resigning rather than carry out the president’s orders. There was no such response from Trump’s White House aides and other top administra­tion officials.

“We haven’t had a voice from within the Trump administra­tion denounce this yet,” said Douglas Brinkley, a presidenti­al historian at Rice University.

“I think at this moment the question is, will leading Republican­s step out of the box and become profiles of courage?”

In the immediate aftermath of Trump’s announceme­nt, many Republican­s appeared more inclined to back his decision, citing their own concerns with Comey’s stewardshi­p of the FBI following months of controvers­y.

None of the Republican­s who did raise concerns were rushing to draw comparison­s to Nixon, the only president to resign from office. Yet they, too, appeared troubled by Trump’s decision.

Comey’s “removal at this particular time will raise questions,” said Sen. Bob Corker, RTenn. It is essential, he said, that ongoing investigat­ions are full “and free of political interferen­ce until their completion.”

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