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Monday, 15 May 2017
James Clapper: democratic institutions are 'under assault' by Trump
Former national intelligence director hammers the president’s actions, calling James Comey’s firing ‘another victory for Russia’
James Clapper testifies on Capitol Hill, during the Senate judiciary
subcommittee hearing on Russian interference in the 2016 election.
Photograph: Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP
Former director of national intelligence James Clapper
has accused Donald Trump of placing American democratic institutions
“under assault” following the sacking of James Comey and cautioned that
the former FBI director’s removal is “another victory” for Russia.
The forceful criticism comes as the justice department began
screening candidates for Comey’s replacement and Democrats renewed calls
for a special prosecutor to oversee an investigation into Russia’s
interference in the 2016 election.
“I think in many ways our institutions are under assault,” Clapper
told CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday. “Both externally, and that’s
the big news here, is Russian interference in our election system. And I
think as well our institutions are under assault internally.”
When asked to clarify if the internal assault came from the president directly, the former spy chief added: “Exactly.”
In a later interview on ABC news, Clapper added that “the Russians
have to consider this [Comey’s sacking] as another victory on the
scoreboard for them”.
The bleak assessment came days after Trump claimed
on Twitter that Clapper had determined “there is no collusion” with
reference to his presidential campaign and Russia, a characterization
that Clapper has refuted.
The former national intelligence director, who served under the Obama
administration from 2010 until Trump’s inauguration, said during a
March interview that he had no knowledge of any collusion between the
Republican’s campaign and Russian operatives. He has since clarified
that during his time in office he was also unaware of an FBI
investigation into such collusion, adding on Sunday: “I don’t know if
there was collusion... And I don’t know of any evidence to it so I can’t
refute it and I can’t confirm it.”
An NBC/Wall Street Journal poll
released on Sunday found only 29% of Americans approved of Comey’s
firing, while 78% supported an independent commission or special
prosecutor to investigate Russia’s interference in the election.
Donald Trump has said he hopes finding a replacement for James Comey will go quickly. Photograph: Mary F. Calvert/Reuters
The result is likely to bolster Democrats as senate minority leader
Chuck Schumer renewed calls for a special prosecutor, and raised
questions over whether US attorney general Jeff Sessions had violated the terms of his recusal from the Russia investigation by recommending the removal of Comey.
Sessions recused himself after it emerged he had failed to disclose contacts between himself and Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak during the 2016 campaign.
“The actions of the last week make all the more reason that he should not be attorney general,” Schumer told CNN on Sunday.
Senate democrats are discussing the possibility of blocking Trump’s
eventual nominee to replace Comey until a special prosecutor is
appointed. Schumer on Sunday indicated he was supportive of such a move.
Comey has rejected an invitation to testify in a closed door senate
committee hearing next week, but has reportedly expressed a desire to
testify in public at a later date. Clapper said on Sunday he had been in
contact with the former FBI director by email, but declined to
characterize the nature of their conversation.
Comey has made no public comment since he was sacked on Tuesday, but was spotted on Saturday at a matinee performance of the Broadway musical Fun Home, which is currently on tour in Washington DC.
On Saturday at least eight candidates for the vacant position met
with Sessions and deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein at the justice
department. The list included the acting FBI director Andrew McCabe,
Alice Fisher, a high-ranking justice department official in the George W
Bush administration, Texas Republican senator John Cornyn, and former
Republican congressman Mike Rogers, who is also a former FBI agent.
Rogers has won the endorsement of the FBI agents association, which represents 13,000 former and current agents and has ties to Trump surrogate and former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani.
Trump told reporters on Air Force One on Saturday that he predicted
the selection and nomination process “is going to go quickly”.
“Almost all of them are very well-known,” Trump said before taking off for Lynchburg, Virginia, where he gave the commencement address at Liberty University.
“They’ve been vetted over their lifetime essentially, but very
well-known, highly respected, really talented people. And that’s what we
want for the FBI.”
Schumer, on Sunday, argued that the eventual nominee should “not be a
partisan politician” and “should be someone with courage” to stand up
to “attempted interference” with the Russia investigation.
Schumer’s call was echoed by at least one Republican senator on
Sunday, as Lindsey Graham told NBC’s Meet the Press he believed the new
FBI director should be someone who “comes from within the ranks or has
such a reputation that has no political backgrounds at all, that can go
into the job on day one”.
Graham added of the ongoing investigation into Russia’s interference
in the election: “The president needs to back off here and let the
investigation go forward.”
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