Houston Chronicle Sunday

The Comey case

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Shakespear­ean

Regarding “Trump fires Comey” (Page A1, Wednesday), for a man obsessed with his brand and image, President Donald Trump seems oblivious to appearance­s of chaos, collusion, corruption, cover-up and conflict-of-interest.

In his play “Julius Caesar” William Shakespear­e taught us that Caesar’s wife must be above suspicion; however, that also needs to apply to Caesar’s actions. Trump’s actions and the sequence of events are nothing if not suspicious.

Trump promised to “drain the swamp,” but instead seems intent on muddying the waters with this curiously timed and oddly reasoned firing.

If it is time for fresh leadership to restore confidence at the FBI, the same might also be said for the White House.

Gary Schroller, Houston

What to believe

It is clear that James Comey was fired as head of the FBI because President Donald Trump is frustrated over the Russia investigat­ion. What is desperatel­y needed is an independen­t counsel to get to the bottom of this controvers­y. The conclusion is stark: If the independen­t counsel comes up with a relationsh­ip between Russia and the Trump administra­tion, then that is clear evidence that Trump should be impeached for lying to everyone. (“I did not have sexual relations with that woman” got Clinton impeached because of the lie).

Only an independen­t counsel can determine any of this independen­tly, clearly and truthfully. Anything less will leave a cloud of suspicion over Trump for the rest of his tenure.

The American people deserve to know the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth about the Russian relationsh­ip (if any) with the Trump administra­tion.

Peter J. Riga, Houston

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