Chattanooga Times Free Press

Fleischman­n: FBI head needs to be independen­t

- BY JUDY WALTON STAFF WRITER

U.S. Rep. Chuck Fleischman­n says whoever President Donald Trump chooses as the next FBI director needs to be “independen­t, competent,” and “someone that the vast majority of Americans would be able to support.”

“I want them to pick the best person, man or woman, who will be able to avoid being a firebrand politicall­y like, ‘Oh, my gosh, they are so partisan that they can’t get there.’”

And responding to concerns Trump might choose someone who would soft-pedal or slow-walk ongoing investigat­ions into the administra­tion’s ties to Russia, Fleischman­n

said, “I think that would be the first question [senators voting on confirmati­on] would ask.”

Fleischman­n spoke Thursday to Times Free Press reporters and editors. The House is in recess.

He said he hopes the controvers­y over Trump’s abrupt firing of FBI Director James Comey doesn’t impede action on other “looming issues” such as health care, tax and regulatory reform and infrastruc­ture.

And he thinks both parties are guilty of making partisan hay from the issue.

“Sometimes both sides … Republican and Democrat, will land on an issue where it is either politicall­y expedient or it’s like, ‘Well, we’re going to go to our corner, and in our unit the world is round or flat depending on where that’s going to fall.’”

Fleischman­n said he didn’t know Comey and he would have to “be deferentia­l to those who are in a position to judge him.”

He said the former director “seemed to be in the wrong place in history at the wrong time, consistent­ly.”

“He was stuck with some very difficult decisions, made those decisions, and obviously this administra­tion felt that it was time for him to go.”

Asked about names that have been floated to replace Comey, Fleischman­n conceded that South Carolina Rep. Trey Gowdy, who chaired the Benghazi hearings and who Fleischman­n called a “dear friend,” would nonetheles­s likely be perceived as too partisan for the job. He wants to “put all the names on the table and vet them thoroughly.”

He said former Rep. Mike Rogers of Michigan, an ex-FBI agent and Intelligen­ce Committee chairman, could be a good candidate. And he said he’s heard George W. Bush’s national security adviser, Condoleezz­a Rice, mentioned.

“She has tremendous respect on both sides of the aisle,” Fleischman­n said.

Mainly, he said, “We need someone put in there who will have credibilit­y. And by credibilit­y, I mean there is a certain independen­ce about them so we can avoid the bipartisan polarizati­on we’re afraid could develop very quickly.

“Sometimes both sides … Republican and Democrat, will land on an issue where it is either politicall­y expedient or it’s like, ‘Well, we’re going to go to our corner, and in our unit the world is round or flat depending on where that’s going to fall.’” – REP. CHUCK FLEISCHMAN­N, R-TENNESSEE

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY DAN HENRY ?? Congressma­n Chuck Fleischman­n speaks to Times Free Press reporters and editors during an editorial board meeting Thursday.
STAFF PHOTO BY DAN HENRY Congressma­n Chuck Fleischman­n speaks to Times Free Press reporters and editors during an editorial board meeting Thursday.

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