The Palm Beach Post

President again assails investigat­ors

He says Russia probe is being run by Democrats.

- Eileen Sullivan

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump trained his rancor on federal investigat­ors Monday and appeared to warn that negative material would emerge about the prosecutor­s leading the inquiry into Russia’ s interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

In a series of Twitter posts Monday, the president said the investigat­ion was being run by Democrats and raised the question of whether the special counsel’s work was being drawn out to influence the outcome of the upcoming midterm congressio­nal elections when Democrats could win enough seats to take control of the House and possibly the Senate.

“Just wait ‘till the Courts get to see your unrevealed Conflflict­s of Interest,” Trump wrote in one of the early morning tweets.

The veiled threat to the special counsel leading the inquiry and the suggestion of bias comes at a time when Trump’s legal team seems to be struggling to present a consistent message to the American public.

The Republican­s could lose control of the House and possibly the Senate in the upcoming elections, in part because of growing disapprova­l of the job Trump is doing.

Trump’s approval rating is at 41 percent, the lowest of presidents at this point in their fifirst terms since former President Jimmy Carter, who had a 40.5 percent approval rating at a comparable time in his administra­tion.

There is no indication that the special counsel investigat­ion, led by Robert Mueller, is being deliberate­ly drawn it out to manipulate votes. The special counsel’s offiffice Monday declined to comment on Trump’s question.

Trump regularly attacks the ongoing investigat­ion, as he did Monday, and has considered firing Mueller — a looming threat that has divided the Republican Party.

Trump has recently taken the position that what the special counsel is investigat­ing as possible obstructio­n of justice is, in reality, Trump fighting back against what he considers to be false accusation­s.

The president has said that the investigat­ion is led by Democrats, even though Mueller is a longtime Republican.

In another tweet Monday, Trump said the Russia investigat­ion is “rapidly losing credibilit­y” and referred to the Republican findings of the House Intelligen­ce Committee — specifical­ly that in a yearlong investigat­ion, Republican­s on the committee found there was no collusion between the Russians and the Trump campaign. Democrats on the committee issued a dissenting document.

Last year, the chairman of the panel, Devin Nunes, R-Calif ., stepped away from leading the Russia investigat­ion over questions about his own credibilit­y to run a fair and bipartisan inquiry.

Trump has previously railed about 13 “hardened” Democrats on the special counsel team. At least 17 of the attorneys on the team have contribute­d to Demo- cratic campaigns, according to records maintained by the Federal Election Commission. And three of the attorneys are registered Democrats, according to reports in The Washington Post and PolitiFact. But the political leanings of the other 14 are unclear.

On Sunday, Rudy Giuliani, one of Trump’s attorneys, al s o sug ge s ted t here are problems with the government’s investigat­ion.

“There’s no question that the amount of government misconduct is accumulati­ng,” Giuliani, a former federal prosecutor and New York Cit y mayor, said on ABC’s “This Week.” “I happen to believe it’s greater than anybody realizes. Very embarrassi­ng to my former Justice Department.”

Giuliani referenced a federal judge’s recent criticism of the special counsel’s fraud case against Trump’s former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort.

The judge, T.S. Ellis III, said Friday that Mueller was more interested in Manafort p rov i di ng i nc r i minat i ng details about Trump than he i s in Manafort’s fraud charges.

‘Just wait ‘till the Courts get to see your unrevealed Conflicts of Interest.’ President Trump

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