President
Trump fired FBI Director James Comey late Thursday amid FBI
criminal investigations into possible collusion between the Trump
campaign and the Russians in interfering with the 2016 election. With
clear comparisons to the Nixon Watergate scandal of the 1970s, this
latest move by the Trump White House suggests the president has
something to hide, and Comey was about to reveal it. With concerns
that ongoing investigations into Trump and his associates will be
delayed if not imperiled, calls for a special prosecutor and an
independent 9-11-style commission will likely grow.
A
statement from the White House said President Trump acted based on
the recommendations of both Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein
and Attorney General Jeff Sessions. “The FBI is one of our
Nation’s most cherished and respected institutions and today
will mark a new beginning for our crown jewel of law enforcement,”
said Trump.
In
a memo
to Sessions entitled, “RESTORING PUBLIC CONFIDENCE IN THE
FBI,” Rosenstein made the case for Comey’s removal,
pointing to Comey’s July 2016 criticism of presidential
candidate Hillary
Clinton for her use of an email server as secretary of state. In
a letter to Trump, Sessions — who in March recused himself on
issues related to the Trump campaign and the Clinton email probes —
recommended the president fire Comey. Under oath during his
confirmation hearing, Sessions — a former Trump campaign
operative —failed to disclose that he met with the Russian
ambassador Sergei Kislyak twice last year.
“While
I greatly appreciate you informing me, on three separate occasions,
that I am not under investigation, I nevertheless concur with the
judgment of the Department of Justice that you are not able to
effectively lead the Bureau,” Trump wrote to Comey, exonerating
himself of wrongdoing in the Russia inquiry. Although Trump’s
purported reason for firing the FBI chief was his mishandling of the
Clinton email investigation, in October, Trump had praised Comey,
suggesting the stated
reasons for the firing are a pretext, paving the way for a
shutdown of the Russiagate investigation by a new FBI director.
Just
hours before the Comey firing, federal
prosecutors issued grand jury subpoenas to associates of Michael
Flynn, former National Security Adviser, seeking business records in
connection with Russian interference with the election. Comey was set
to testify before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Thursday. He
reportedly learned of his own termination at the Los Angeles FBI
field office, where he looked at the television
screen as he was addressing agents.
Some
observers are calling the Comey termination a crisis of the rule of
law, a constitutional crisis on par with the “Saturday
Night Massacre” of October 20, 1973, when President Nixon
fired independent special prosecutor Archibald Cox in the Watergate
scandal. This led to the resignations of Attorney General Elliot
Richardson and Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus.
“Donald
Trump’s firing of James Comey is a brazen and disgraceful abuse
of power,” said DNC Chairman Tom Perez in a statement. “The
fact that the leadership
of the Justice Department was complicit in manufacturing this joke of
a rationale for Comey’s dismissal at the request of Trump is
further evidence that nobody in this Administration can be trusted to
lead an honest investigation into a serious national security issue.
It is time for leaders in both parties to come together and call for
the appointment of a special prosecutor at the Department of Justice
and an independent commission to conduct the kind of investigation
that the American people deserve.”
Earlier
this week, former acting attorney general Sally Yates testified
before a Senate Judiciary subcommittee that she had warned the Trump
White House about then-National Security Adviser Mike Flynn and his
“problematic” conduct with Russia. Flynn acted as a paid
foreign agent of Russia yet did not disclose the foreign payments,
although the Pentagon had urged him to do so. Trump subsequently
fired Yates. During that hearing, former Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper testified that European allies passed
information to the U.S. on contacts between the Trump campaign and
Russia, noting “the specifics are quite sensitive.”
The
chain of events has been perplexing. On March 20, Comey
announced before the House Intelligence Committee that he was
investigating coordination between the Trump campaign and Russia to
interfere in the U.S. presidential election. Yates was scheduled to
testify before the committee on March 28, but committee chair Devin
Nunes (R-Calif.) cancelled the hearing, made a secret visit to the
White House, held a bizarre, impromptu news conference, then recused
himself from the investigation. The House Ethics Committee is now
investigating Nunes for possibly disclosing confidential information.
Meanwhile,
Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah), chair of the House Oversight Committee
charged with investigating Flynn’s payments from foreign
sources, announced his resignation from Congress. The White House has
refused to hand over any documents concerning Flynn to the committee.
“President
Trump, there is absolutely no accountability with regard to this
president. He basically seems to be able to do whatever he wants. And
our Republican friends are aiding and abetting that situation. We
look at the emoluments situation, family members making all kinds of
money off the presidency,” Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.),
ranking member of the House oversight committee told MSNBC, adding
that “if this were Hillary Clinton, the Republicans would be
trying to impeach her right now.”
What
happens next? The investigations continue. The Senate
Intelligence Committee has asked the Treasury Department’s
financial crimes and money laundering unit for all financial
information on President Trump and his team.
This
commentary was originally published by The Grio
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