Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Comey-Mueller friendship 'bothersome': Trump

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump says it’s “bothersome” that the man investigat­ing possible ties between Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and Russia is good friends with fired FBI director James Comey.

Trump told Fox and Friends in an interview broadcast yesterday that special counsel Robert Mueller was “very, very good friends with Comey, which is very bothersome”.

Comey was overseeing the investigat­ion until Trump fired him last month out of frustratio­n with the inquiry.

Asked whether Mueller should step down from the investigat­ion because of his friendship with Comey, Trump said: “We’re going to have to see.”

Mueller and Comey worked together at the Justice Department in the Bush administra­tion.

Meanwhile, a top US Justice Department official has denied rumoured plans to sack Mueller, the special counsel running the probe into Russia’s election meddling, amid reports Trump wants him fired.

Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who named Mueller to lead the investigat­ion into whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russian interferen­ce, testified there was no reason to dismiss him and said he alone has the authority to do so, but he himself could do so.

Asked in a Senate Appropriat­ions Committee hearing if there was any cause to fire Mueller, Rosenstein flatly replied: “No.

“As long as I’m in this position, he’s not going to be fired without cause,” he added.

Asked if he would fire Mueller on the president’s orders, he said:

“I’m not going to follow any orders unless I believe those are lawful and appropriat­e orders.

“I appointed him. I stand by it. . . and I am going to defend the integrity of that investigat­ion,” he said.

Rosenstein said he was also unaware of any “secret plan” to get rid of Mueller.

Mueller has been silent since he was named to head the Russia investigat­ion on May 17, a week after Trump fired Comey expressing frustratio­n over the probe.

But the investigat­ion by the Justice Department and probes carried out by two congressio­nal committees have moved closer to the president, with Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner and other former campaign staff having received requests and subpoenas for informatio­n from investigat­ors. — AFP

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Donald Trump

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