In January, during the hearings to consider Donald Trump’s nomination of then Senator Jeff Sessions for Attorney General, Senator Mike Lee, the Republican of Utah, noted that whoever held that office had a good deal of “flexibility” on the matter of special prosecutors. What guidelines would Sessions follow, Lee asked, in responding to calls to appoint one? As it happens, calls of that sort have been heard loudly since Wednesday, in the wake of President Trump’s firing of the F.B.I. director, James Comey. Sessions likely had a different set of circumstance in mind back in January, although even then there were indications—hacking, Russian contacts, financial conflicts, nepotism—of the legal morass to come. Sessions ought to have known that Lee’s question was not entirely hypothetical.
See the rest of the story at newyorker.com
Related:
New F.B.I.-Director Job ApplicationComey’s Firing and the Look of PowerHow Comey’s Firing Accelerates the Russia Investigations
Published on May 10, 2017 16:07