Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

McCabe responds to critics

- By Matt Zapotosky

Ex-acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe said GOP lawmakers didn’t push back on a Trump investigat­ion.

WASHINGTON — Former acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe said Tuesday that officials briefed a bipartisan group of lawmakers after the bureau opened an investigat­ion into President Donald Trump in May 2017, and that no one in the room pushed back.

“That’s the important part here, Savannah,” McCabe said in an interview with Savannah Guthrie on NBC’s “Today” show. “No one objected. Not on legal grounds, not on constituti­onal grounds and not based on the facts.”

The comments seemed designed to rebut criticism that McCabe has faced from Trump and other Republican­s for initiating the investigat­ion into Trump and participat­ing in conversati­ons about other, more dramatic steps against the president. McCabe told CBS’ “60 Minutes” over the weekend that Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein talked with him about wearing a wire to surreptiti­ously record the president, or using the 25th Amendment to oust him — prompting a strong, negative reaction from Trump and his GOP allies. Rosenstein has vaguely disputed McCabe’s descriptio­n of those conversati­ons.

“Treason!” Trump wrote Monday night on Twitter, after apparently quoting from a segment on Sean Hannity’s television show about McCabe.

The briefing, McCabe said, was with the Gang of Eight — a bipartisan group of lawmakers comprising the Democratic and Republican leaders of the House and Senate, as well as the leaders from both parties of the House and Senate intelligen­ce committees.

McCabe — who is in the middle of a media tour promoting his new book, “The Threat” — told Guthrie the FBI felt it had good reason to investigat­e Trump in May 2017 after he fired James Comey as the bureau’s director. He said the bureau thought it was “possible” that Trump was working on behalf of Russia, and opening a case signified that the FBI was treating the matter as a national security threat.

“It is saying that we had informatio­n that led us to believe that there might be a threat to national security — in this case that the president himself might, in fact, be a threat to the United States’ national security,” McCabe said.

McCabe, who has long been a target of criticism from Trump, was fired from the FBI in March 2018, after the Justice Department’s inspector general alleged he lied repeatedly to investigat­ors exploring a media disclosure. McCabe has said he believes he was fired because he opened the investigat­ion into Trump. He told Guthrie that he plans to sue the Justice Department over his dismissal — although he did not specifical­ly address the evidence that the inspector general detailed against him.

On Tuesday, Trump again lashed out at McCabe — though he took aim not at McCabe’s comments about the Russia investigat­ion, but instead his separate assertion that Trump commented negatively on McCabe’s wife’s unsuccessf­ul run for a state senate seat in Virginia. Trump has repeatedly noted that Jill McCabe took money from the group of a prominent supporter of Hillary Clinton, and Andrew McCabe alleged in his book that Trump told him his wife’s loss “must have been really tough.”

“To lose,” Trump said, according to McCabe’s account. “To be a loser.”

In a tweet Tuesday, Trump wrote, “I never said anything bad about Andrew McCabe’s wife other than she (they) should not have taken large amounts of campaign money from a Crooked Hillary source when Clinton was under investigat­ion by the FBI. I never called his wife a loser to him (another McCabe made up lie)!”

Asked on ABC’s “The View” about the president’s recent tweets about him, McCabe said, “The president has been lying about me and my family for the last two years.”

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP 2017 ?? Andrew McCabe is on tour promoting “The Threat: How the FBI Protects America in the Age of Terror and Trump.”
ALEX BRANDON/AP 2017 Andrew McCabe is on tour promoting “The Threat: How the FBI Protects America in the Age of Terror and Trump.”

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