The Oklahoman

Mueller named special counsel

- BY ERIC TUCKER AND NANCY BENAC

WASHINGTON — Besieged from all sides, the Trump administra­tion relented and appointed former FBI Director Robert Mueller Wednesday evening as a special counsel to oversee the federal investigat­ion into allegation­s Russia and Donald Trump’s campaign collaborat­ed to influence the 2016 presidenti­al election.

The appointmen­t came as Democrats insisted ever more loudly that someone outside Trump’s Justice Department must handle the politicall­y charged investigat­ion. Republican congressio­nal leaders had resisted the idea, and there had been no clear sign that Trump or his top White House aides were about to announce it.

However, an increasing number of Republican­s had joined in calling for digging deeper, especially after Trump fired FBI Director James Comey who had been leading the bureau’s probe — and after Comey associates said he had made notes of a meeting in which Trump asked him to drop the FBI’s investigat­ion.

Early reaction from Congress was generally positive to the appointmen­t of Mueller.

Democrats said it was not a moment too soon, though they also expressed caution, waiting to see how Mueller would perform.

Republican House Oversight Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz of Utah said Mueller was a “great selection. Impeccable credential­s. Should be widely accepted.”

Fellow Republican Peter King of New York was more leery because of the broad authority special prosecutor­s have. He said, “I’m worried with all special counsels because there’s no control over them and they can abuse their power.”

In the 1990s, Democrats complained that independen­t counsel Kenneth Starr, who investigat­ed President Bill Clinton, oversteppe­d his authority.

Earlier Wednesday, Trump gave no indication of the announceme­nt to come in a commenceme­nt address at the Coast Guard Academy.

He made no reference to the controvers­ies about Russia or the Russia ties for fired National Security Adviser Michael Flynn or Comey’s dismissal. But he complained bitterly that about criticism of his stillyoung presidency.

“No politician in history, and I say this with great surety, has been treated worse or more unfairly,” he said. “You can’t let the critics and the naysayers get in the way of your dreams . ... I guess that’s why we won. Adversity makes you stronger. Don’t give in, don’t back down. ... And the more righteous your fight, the more opposition that you will face.”

On Capitol Hill, meanwhile, three congressio­nal committees, all led by Republican­s, confirmed they wanted to hear from Comey. Congressio­nal investigat­ors have been seeking Comey’s memos on his meeting with Trump, as well as documents from the Justice Department related to his firing.

The latest political storm, coupled with the still-potent fallout from Trump’s recent disclosure of classified informatio­n to Russian diplomats, overshadow­ed all else in the capital and beyond. Stocks fell sharply on Wall Street as investors worried that the latest turmoil in Washington could hinder Trump’s pro-business agenda.

Republican­s, frustrated by the president’s relentless parade of problems, largely sought to cool the heated climate with assurances they would get to the bottom of scandals.

“There’s clearly a lot of politics being played,” House Speaker Paul Ryan said before the announceme­nt of Mueller’s appointmen­t. “Our job is to get the facts and to be sober about doing that.”

Unimpresse­d, Rep. Elijah Cummings, top Democrat on a key House oversight panel, said, “Speaker Ryan has shown he has zero, zero, zero appetite for any investigat­ion of Donald Trump.” He accused the Republican­s of taking great pains to “do as little as humanly possible, just to claim that they’re doing something.”

Interest was hardly limited to the U.S. No less a commentato­r than Russia’s Vladimir Putin called the dramatic charges swirling around Trump evidence of “political schizophre­nia spreading in the U.S.” He offered to furnish a “record” of the Trump diplomats meeting in the Oval Office if the White House desired it.

There was no word on what that record might entail, a question many were likely to raise in light of Trump’s recent warning to Comey that he had “better hope” there were no tapes of a discussion they’d had.

The White House disputed Comey’s account of the February conversati­on concerning Flynn, but did not offer specifics. Several members of Congress said that if Trump did suggest that Comey “let this go” regarding Flynn’s Russian contacts, it was probably just a joke, light banter.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Former FBI Director Robert Mueller testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, June 19, 2013. On Wednesday, the Justice Department said it is appointing Mueller as special counsel to oversee investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al...
[AP PHOTO] Former FBI Director Robert Mueller testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, June 19, 2013. On Wednesday, the Justice Department said it is appointing Mueller as special counsel to oversee investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al...

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