Baltimore Sun

Flake links judicial votes to vote on Mueller bill

- By Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON — Republican Sen. Jeff Flake said Wednesday that he won’t vote to confirm judicial nominees unless GOP leaders hold a vote on legislatio­n to protect special counsel Robert Mueller from being fired.

Flake of Arizona and Democratic Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware went to the Senate floor on Wednes- day and tried to bring the legislatio­n up for a vote. But Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell objected. McConnell has said that the legislatio­n is unnecessar­y because he believes Mueller won’t be fired.

Flake and Coons called for the vote in the wake of Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ departure. President Donald Trump pushed Sessions out last week and temporaril­y replaced him with a loyalist, Matt Whitaker, who has criticized the Sen. Jeff Flake is pushing to protect Robert Mueller. investigat­ion. The special counsel’s probe is investigat­ing Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election and Russian ties to Trump’s Republican campaign.

“This is not a moment for our leadership to be weak or irresolute or compromise­d in any way,” Flake said, adding that “the president now has this investigat­ion in his sights and we all know it.”

Flake, who retires in January, said he wouldn’t vote to confirm judges on the Senate floor or to advance them out of committee until there was a vote on the Mueller bill. He said he’d continue to come to the Senate floor to call for one.

McConnell objected without comment. But he said earlier Wednesday that he’s never heard anyone at the White House suggest they want to shut the investigat­ion down.

“I think it’s in no danger, so I don’t think any legislatio­n is necessary,” McConnell said.

The move by Flake and Coons comes more than a year after the bipartisan legislatio­n was introduced and underscore­s the deep concerns many lawmakers have long had over Trump’s comments about Mueller’s investigat­ion. Trump has repeatedly called the probe a “hoax” and leveled personal criticism at the former FBI director. Those concerns were only amplified after Trump appointed Whitaker as acting attorney general.

Whitaker is now overseeing the probe, which had previously been overseen by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.

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J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP

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