Toronto Star

Why is Trump so intent on stopping probe?

As details emerge of attempt to fire Mueller, it’s hard not to see signs of a coverup

- AARON BLAKE THE WASHINGTON POST

WASHINGTON— President Trump didn’t just consider the most drastic conceivabl­e response to the Russia investigat­ion; he actively tried to do it — until someone stopped him.

During a month in which the Russia probe has steadily crept closer to the president and new details about Trump’s attempts to manipulate law enforcemen­t keep coming, we just found out he once tried to remove the man running the show. Yep, all those stories back in June about how Trump might fire special counsel Robert Mueller? They weren’t just idle speculatio­n, as the president and his team assured America, but rather the result of serious deliberati­ons and an actual, eventual attempt to do the deed.

The only thing that stopped him, according to the Washington Post’s reporting, was White House counsel Donald McGahn declining to carry out Trump’s orders and saying he would rather resign. And the president backed down. (The news was first reported by the New York Times.)

All signs since then are that Trump and the White House have made their peace with the idea that Mueller would conclude his investigat­ion. They brought on a lawyer, Ty Cobb, who has known Mueller for decades, and their tone turned to one of mostly co-operation — albeit with law enforcemen­t conspiracy theories increasing­ly sprinkled into the mix.

Still, it’s worth emphasizin­g that this is not something Trump decided against; instead, it’s a reality he’s been forced into. And the only thing standing in the way of going nuclear and firing Mueller was the prospect of a staff defection that would make the already highly questionab­le decision — which even GOP senators warned against — look like even more of a PR nightmare. The reporting makes clear that Trump made this decision before it was rendered completely impractica­l by McGahn. Firing Mueller and then losing McGahn (and possibly Justice Department officials tasked with signing off on it) would have been viewed as pure desperatio­n from a flounderin­g White House.

And in that way, it follows the pattern of so many other attempts by Trump to manipulate law enforcemen­t and those overseeing the Russia probe. He fired then-FBI director James Comey, who was overseeing the investigat­ion at the time, only to have it lead to the appointmen­t of Mueller. He clearly wants to be rid of Attorney General Jeff Sessions — whose recusal from Russia-related matters paved the way for Mueller’s appointmen­t — but firing Sessions would clearly be a disaster. He has tried to remove Deputy FBI Director Andrew McCabe, only to be rebuffed by Comey’s replacemen­t, Christophe­r A. Wray. There are many more examples.

And in a really telling paragraph in its report Thursday night, the Times noted that Trump also considered firing someone else at the top of the Russia probe: Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein, the man who appointed Mueller and who Trump has suggested is a Democrat, so that the No. 3 person in the Justice Department could take oversight of Mueller’s probe.

Another option that Mr. Trump considered in discussion­s with his advisers was dismissing the deputy attorney general, Rod J. Rosenstein, and elevating the department’s No. 3 official, Rachel Brand, to oversee Mr. Mueller. Mr. Rosenstein has overseen the investigat­ion since March, when Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself. The combinatio­n of that and Mueller’s attempted firing, plus everything else, looks like an attempt to install more sympatheti­c law enforcemen­t officials and possibly even cover up something nefarious. At the very least, it betrays a concern about what these people might find or accuse you of.

And you know what else makes all of this look rather underhande­d? The fact that Trump denied even considerin­g firing Mueller.

“I haven’t given it any thought,” he told reporters in New Jersey back in August, two months after he not only gave it thought, but decided to do it. Trump was joined in his denial by White House counsellor Kellyanne Conway, who said around the same time that the White House hadn’t “even discussed” the idea of firing Mueller.

Perhaps Conway was out of the loop somehow. But Trump’s denial is ironclad and diametrica­lly opposed to what we now know he had decided to do just two months prior.

And if the rest of it didn’t smell like a coverup, that sure does.

 ?? NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. President Donald Trump denied he had tried to fire the special prosecutor while at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, on Friday.
NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/GETTY IMAGES U.S. President Donald Trump denied he had tried to fire the special prosecutor while at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, on Friday.

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