The Palm Beach Post

With FBI director’s firing, the president is lying again

- He writes for the New York Times.

David Leonhardt

The president is lying again.

He is lying about the reason he fired James Comey, the FBI director. President Donald Trump claimed that he was doing so because Comey bungled the investigat­ion into Hillary Clinton’s email, which meant that Comey was “not able to effectivel­y lead the bureau.”

There is no reason to believe Trump’s version of the facts and many reasons to believe he is lying. How can I be so confident?

First, it’s important to remember just how often Trump lies. Virtually whenever he finds it more convenient to tell a falsehood than to tell a truth, he chooses the falsehood.

An incomplete list of the things he has lied about include: Barack Obama’s birthplace, Obama’s wiretap, John F. Kennedy’s assassinat­ion, Sept. 11, the Iraq war, ISIS, NATO, military veterans, Mexican immigrants, Muslim immigrants, anti-Semitic attacks, the unemployme­nt rate, the murder rate, the Electoral College, voter fraud, the size of his inaugural crowd, his health care bill and his own groping of women.

Second, Trump previously praised Comey for reopening the Clinton email investigat­ion, which was the core of Trump’s rationale for the firing, as Igor Volsky noted.

Third, Trump claimed that he was merely following up on a Justice Department recommenda­tion and released a letter from the department to bolster his case. Yet the timing doesn’t make sense — and Trump aides have already undercut their boss, by acknowledg­ing that he wanted to fire Comey.

As Bill Kristol pointed out, the Justice Department letter was dated the same day as the firing, and the official who wrote it has been on the job for just two weeks — not enough time for a serious review that could have reversed Trump’s previous position.

“Trump wanted to do it, and they created a paper trail,” noted Kristol, a conservati­ve. “One can be at once a critic of Comey and alarmed by what Trump has done and how he has done it.”

White House sources also admitted on Tuesday night that Trump himself initiated the firing. The White House charged Jeff Sessions, the attorney gen- eral, with coming up with a reason to fire Comey.

Finally, and most obviously, Trump had a very big motive to fire Comey and install a loyalist. Comey was overseeing the investigat­ion into the Trump campaign’s numerous strange ties with the Russian government.

“The firing of James Comey as FBI director is a stunning event,” Benjamin Wittes and Susan Hennessey, two of the sharpest observers of the Russia case, wrote for Lawfare. “It is a profoundly dangerous thing — a move that puts the Trump-Russia investigat­ion in immediate jeopardy and removes from the investigat­ive hierarchy the one senior official whom President Trump did not appoint and one who is known to stand up to power.”

It’s now clear that Trump’s Justice Department has no independen­ce. Both Sessions, and Sessions’s deputy, Rod Rosenstein, are acting like Trump enforcers.

The only way to unwind the constituti­onal crisis is an independen­t inquiry, completely free of Trump’s oversight. Several Republican members of Congress expressed concern about Comey’s firing, but words aren’t enough.

Congress needs to give Americans reason to believe the Russia investigat­ion isn’t a charade with a predetermi­ned outcome. They need to make clear that while the president may think he is above the truth, he is not above the law.

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