USA TODAY International Edition

The real surprise is the administra­tion took so long to fire the FBI director

- James S. Robbins James S. Robbins, a member of USA TODAY’s Board of Contributo­rs, served as a special assistant to the secretary of defense in the George W. Bush administra­tion.

In March, FBI Director James Comey was hailed as “the most powerful person in Washington.” His power supposedly was based on his ongoing investigat­ion into Russian influence on the 2016 presidenti­al election, an investigat­ion that has turned up nothing of great importance, certainly nothing to substantia­te charges of Russia “hacking the election.”

In fact, Comey had been a dead man walking for some time. He was a director without a constituen­cy. He had tried to strike a balance in a divided political environmen­t and wound up alienating both sides.

Democrats blame him for Hillary Clinton’s election loss. Just last week, she said that if the election were held Oct. 27, she would have been the president — that is, the day before Comey’s dramatic note to Congress that he had reopened the FBI’s investigat­ion into her alleged mishandlin­g of classified informatio­n through her bootleg email server.

Then two days before Election Day, Comey said “never mind.”

Whether this roller coaster ride had an impact on the presidency is one question, but Comey’s seemingly erratic behavior so close to an election was quite another. I was at a meeting with senior members of the law enforcemen­t community when Comey backed off the investigat­ion, and they expressed utter bewilderme­nt. It went beyond how this would affect Comey’s career or his reputation; he was potentiall­y tarnishing the bureau itself.

Republican­s have never bought the story that Comey cost Clinton the election. And they fault him for not recommendi­ng criminal prosecutio­n for her alleged misdeeds. But their main complaint was that he gave the Russia story more weight than it deserved. In March, Comey revealed there had been a counterint­elligence investigat­ion on “the nature of any links between individual­s associated with the Trump campaign and the Russian government, and whether there was any coordinati­on between the campaign and Russia’s efforts.”

This was an unpreceden­ted admission, and it might have been an attempt on Comey’s part to make it politicall­y difficult to fire him. Clearly, not difficult enough. And while Comey said he had “no informatio­n that supports” the idea that President Trump had been “wiretapped,” the full nature of the surveillan­ce that Trump’s campaign and administra­tion have been subjected to has yet to be revealed.

The bottom line was that Comey repeatedly made himself the issue. His mandate was to enforce the law fairly and impartiall­y. Instead, he appeared time and again to be gaming the system.

A March poll showed that only 17% of Americans had a favorable opinion of Comey. A February poll showed public trust in the FBI at 80%, making it one of the most trusted institutio­ns in the country. With James Comey gone, the FBI can find a director more worthy of the title.

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