USA TODAY US Edition

Compelling Comey testimony shows he’s no ‘nut job’

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The millions of Americans who watched — from homes and businesses, bars and classrooms across the USA — James Comey’s extraordin­ary congressio­nal testimony on Thursday saw several sides to the 6-foot-8 lawman from Yonkers, N.Y.

They saw the seasoned federal agent, who quickly sized up the newly elected President Trump as a liar and memorializ­ed their every encounter.

They saw the savvy operator, who had a friend leak the unclassifi­ed notes about Trump to the

The New York Times as a way to engineer appointmen­t of a special counsel.

They saw the all-too-human careerist, who failed to directly challenge improper requests from Trump and who, a year earlier, acceded to the attorney general’s desire to characteri­ze the criminal investigat­ion into Hillary Clinton’s email as a mere “matter.”

And they saw the unapologet­ic patriot, who expressed the outrage about Russian meddling in our democracy that Americans should be — but aren’t — hearing from their president.

What they most assuredly did not see was “a real nut job,” as Trump is said to have described Comey to Russian officials in the Oval Office the day after abruptly firing the FBI director less than four years into his 10-year term.

During Comey’s breathless­ly awaited sworn testimony to the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, he calmly and credibly laid out a case that the president has lied repeatedly — about why Comey was fired, about who invited whom to dinner at the White House, about whether Trump sought his “loyalty” and, most damning, whether Trump sought to derail a criminal investigat­ion of former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

All this adds to the credibilit­y crisis surroundin­g the White House that has undermined the president’s agenda at home, stymied the administra­tion’s efforts to recruit top talent, and frayed longstandi­ng alliances abroad.

Whether Trump is a criminal as well as a liar is a more compli- cated matter, one that will depend on legal definition­s of obstructio­n of justice and additional evidence to be uncovered by special counsel Robert Mueller and Congress.

While the inquiries unfold, two supreme ironies stand out:

One is that Trump wasn’t a target of the Russia investigat­ion, but because of his own actions in the Oval Office, the president is surely now in Mueller’s crosshairs.

The other is that Comey, who helped Donald Trump become president with an October-surprise announceme­nt that the Clinton email inquiry had been reopened (only to find nothing), could turn out to be the man most responsibl­e for hastening Trump’s departure from office.

 ?? HENRY TAYLOR, USA TODAY ?? Former FBI director James Comey testifies to the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee on Thursday.
HENRY TAYLOR, USA TODAY Former FBI director James Comey testifies to the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee on Thursday.

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