The Day

Trump interview comes with strings

Giuliani’s advice: Don’t take questions from Mueller unless the White House gets informant’s informatio­n

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Washington — President Donald Trump’s legal team would advise that he refuse to submit to an interview with special counsel Robert Mueller unless the team can review classified informatio­n shared with select lawmakers about the origins of the FBI investigat­ion into Russia’s election meddling, Trump’s personal lawyer said Sunday.

Rudy Giuliani said that should Mueller’s investigat­ors seek a court order to compel the president to testify, Trump’s lawyers would fight such a subpoena all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, if necessary. “I think we win it,” Giuliani said. Giuliani downplayed the chances that Trump would fire Mueller, a Republican who once was FBI director and has served under GOP presidents. Asked if Trump would dismiss anyone if the investigat­ion kept going, Giuliani told “Fox News Sunday” that firings would play “into the hands of playing the victim, Watergate.”

Giuliani’s public negotiatio­n over terms of an interview focuses on the use of a government informant who approached members of Trump’s 2016 campaign in a possible bid to glean intelligen­ce on Russian efforts to sway his race against Democrat Hillary Clinton. Trump has made unproven claims of FBI misconduct and political bias and has denounced the informant, without evidence, as “a spy.”

The two meetings with select lawmakers, held last Thursday, were requested by Trump’s GOP allies in Congress and arranged by the White House. The president has tried to sow suspicions about the legitimacy of the FBI investigat­ion, and he and his allies have focused on the use of the informant. After the meetings, which included Justice Department, FBI officials, congressio­nal leaders from both parties and Democratic and Republican leaders of the intelligen­ce committees, Democrats said they saw no evidence to support Republican allegation­s that the FBI acted inappropri­ately.

Nonetheles­s, Giuliani said the Trump camp wants access to the material presented at those briefings to help prepare the president for a possible interview with Mueller.

“If they don’t show us these documents, well, we are just going to have to say no,” Giuliani said. It’s unclear, however, if Trump would heed his lawyers’ advice.

Justice Department officials didn’t immediatel­y return a message seeking comment on whether the president had requested a briefing similar to what was provided to members of Congress last week.

In a separate television appearance, Giuliani said Trump was “adamant” about wanting to agree to an interview, saying, “If he wasn’t thinking about it and it wasn’t an active possibilit­y, we would be finished with that by now and we would have moved on to getting the investigat­ion over with another way.”

The new wrinkle, he said, if the disclosure about the informant.

“We are more convinced, as we see it, that this is a rigged investigat­ion. Now we have this whole new ‘Spygate’ thing thrown on top of it, on top of already very legitimate questions,” he told CNN’s “State of the Union.”

“We are more convinced, as we see it, that this is a rigged investigat­ion.”

RUDY GIULIANI

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