USA TODAY US Edition

Relief and risks

What the appointmen­t of a special counsel means for Trump

- Susan Page @susanpage USA TODAY

“A thorough investigat­ion will confirm what we already know — there was no collusion between my campaign and any foreign entity. I look forward to this matter concluding quickly.” President Trump

The Justice Department’s appointmen­t of a special counsel to investigat­e the growing Russia quagmire has given President Trump short-term relief but long-term risks.

On a day the president watched his support among some Republican­s fracture and congressio­nal inquiries gain steam, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein appointed former FBI director Robert Mueller to take over the agency’s investigat­ion into Moscow’s alleged meddling in last year’s election, a controvers­y that includes questions of collusion by Trump associates.

The appointmen­t calmed escalating demands for an independen­t inquiry from Democrats. It was also welcomed by some congressio­nal Republican­s whose hopes of major legislativ­e initiative­s were sidelined by political scandal. For Trump, the appointmen­t of a special counsel means that the investigat­ion is likely to last not for months but for years.

A special counsel was “necessary in order for the American people to have full confidence in the outcome,” Rosenstein said in a statement.

Trump, who reportedly wasn’t consulted about the appointmen­t before it was made, released a three-sentence statement. “A thorough investigat­ion will confirm what we already know — there was no collusion between my campaign and any foreign entity,” he said. “I look forward to this matter concluding quickly.”

That’s not likely. Special counsels typically aren’t quick, and they can be unpredicta­ble.

Just ask Bill and Hillary Clin- ton. The appointmen­t of Kenneth Starr to investigat­e an Arkansas land transactio­n known as Whitewater initially was supported by some Clinton White House aides trying to staunch a political controvers­y. But it morphed into a broader investigat­ion of President Clinton and his personal misbehavio­r in the White House. It led ultimately to his 1998 impeachmen­t by the House, although he wasn’t convicted by the Senate.

The Trump administra­tion previously had dismissed the need for an independen­t inquiry. “There’s frankly no need for a special prosecutor,” White House spokesman Sean Spicer said the other day.

But the appointmen­t came after a cascade of extraordin­ary disclosure­s in the space of two weeks: Congressio­nal testimony by former acting attorney general Sally Yates about her warnings to the White House that forced the departure of national security adviser Michael Flynn. Trump’s decision to fire Comey, saying in an interview the Russia investigat­ion was one reason. And reports that Comey had written contempora­neous memos after Trump in February asked if he could let the Flynn investigat­ion “go.”

Now the president can’t count on the loyalty of officials in his administra­tion to protect him — not Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who has been forced to recuse himself from the Russia inquiry because of his own contacts during the campaign with the Russian ambassador, nor whomever Trump names to succeed James Comey to head the FBI.

Mueller isn’t beholden to Trump for his job. His conclusion­s could answer the question of what Trump’s campaign did and whether the president tried to obstruct the inquiry — an allegation that critics say could amount to an impeachabl­e offense. Arizona Sen. John McCain, a maverick Republican, said Tuesday night it was of “Watergate size and scale.”

Trump was defiant in a commenceme­nt address Wednesday at the Coast Guard Academy, an occasion that presidents typically have used to focus on the graduating class’ dedication and the national security challenges they will face. He did some of that but also complained about his own treatment in office.

“Look at the way I’ve been treated lately, especially by the media,” he said. “No politician in history, and I say with surety, has been treated worse, more unfairly.” Other presidents, from Richard Nixon to Bill Clinton, have decried their treatment in the news media, though none at this early stage of their tenures.

As of Wednesday, Trump had been president for just 118 days.

 ?? PAUL J. RICHARDS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ??
PAUL J. RICHARDS, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

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