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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Saturday, 13 May 2017
Trump threatens ex-FBI head Comey with possible 'tapes' of conversations
President’s tweet suggests he had been secretly taping White House
meetings, after the New York Times reported that he demanded ‘loyalty’
from Comey
‘As a very active president with lots of things happening, it is not
possible for my surrogates to stand at podium with perfect accuracy!’
Trump tweeted.
Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP
Donald Trump threatened former FBI director James Comey on Twitter on Friday morning.
Trump tweeted: “James Comey better hope that there are no ‘tapes’ of our conversations before he starts leaking to the press!”
The tweet, which if taken at face value would suggest Trump has been secretly taping White House meetings, came after the New York Times reported that he demanded “loyalty” from Comey in a private dinner held shortly after Trump took office.
At the White House press briefing on Friday afternoon, press secretary Sean Spicer repeatedly refused to deny that Trump was taping visitors to the White House.
Comey, who was overseeing an investigation into alleged links between Trump aides and Russia during the 2016 election, was fired on Tuesday in a surprise announcement.
The White House initially claimed Comey was fired by recommendation of deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein,
who was dissatisfied with Comey’s handling of the Clinton email
scandal. But Trump later said it was entirely his decision and said
“this Russia thing” factored into it.
The White House’s constantly shifting story on Comey’s firing fueled
controversy as administration officials who initially followed the
Rosenstein line had to confront Trump’s statement in an interview with
NBC.
“I was going to fire Comey,” Trump said. “My decision. I was going to fire Comey.”
The mention of tapes will only fuel further comparisons to Richard Nixon and the Watergate scandal. Nixon infamously taped meetings in the Oval Office and recordings of those meetings led to his resignation from office.
Michael Beschloss, a leading presidential historian, said on Twitter on Friday:
“Presidents are supposed to have stopped routinely taping visitors
without their knowledge when Nixon’s taping system was revealed in
1973.”
Adam Schiff, the senior Democrat on the House intelligence committee, said on Twitter:
“ Mr President, if there are ‘tapes’ relevant to the Comey firing, it’s
because you made them and they should be provided to Congress.”
Two other leading House Democrats, Elijah Cummings of Maryland and
John Conyers of Michigan, said in an open letter that the White House
must hand over such tapes, should they in fact exist. Trump: it was my decision to fire ‘showboat’ Comey
Trump’s sacking of Comey had already been likened to the “Saturday Night Massacre”
of 1973, when attorney general Elliot L Richardson and deputy attorney
general William D Ruckelshaus resigned after refusing an order to fire
Archibald Cox, the special prosecutor leading the Watergate
investigation.
Several Senate Democrats explicitly compared the
firing of Comey to that event, comparisons that were further fueled
when Trump’s first public comment on the topic came during an
unannounced Oval Office meeting with Henry Kissinger, Nixon’s secretary
of state.
On Friday morning, before issuing his threat to Comey, Trump first tweeted:
“Again, the story that there was collusion between the Russians &
Trump campaign was fabricated by Dems as an excuse for losing the
election.”
He then seemed to blame his staffers for the shifting narrative. As a result, he suggested ending White House press briefings.
“As
a very active president with lots of things happening, it is not
possible for my surrogates to stand at podium with perfect accuracy!” he
wrote.
“Maybe the best thing to do would be to cancel all future ‘press
briefings’ and hand out written responses for the sake of accuracy???”
The White House handed out written statements on Tuesday, after
Comey’s firing. The statements were later revealed to be inaccurate.
James Clapper, the former director of national intelligence, recalled
the day of Comey’s dinner with Trump, 27 January, on MSNBC on Friday.
Comey had hosted a farewell ceremony for Clapper, who was leaving
office, and was reluctant to go to meet Trump.
“Jim and I spoke briefly before the ceremony and he mentioned that he
had been invited to the White House to have dinner with the president
and he that was uneasy with that because of even compromising the
optics, the appearance, of independence, not only of him but of the FBI,” said Clapper.
Asked why he thought Comey had gone anyway, Clapper added:
“Anyone who is a serving officer in the government and you are asked by
the president for dinner I think it’s professional courtesy. You’re in a
difficult position to refuse to go. But I know he was uneasy with it
just for the appearance of compromising the independence of the FBI
which is a hallowed tenet in our system.”
Clapper also cast doubt on two Trump claims about his conversations
with Comey. He said that the suggestion that Comey told the president
was not under investigation was “very inconsistent with what I know of
Jim Comey”. He added that: “I think it would be inappropriate and in
Jim’s case out of character for him to ask to stay on.”
Trump continued his pushback on the Russia investigation later on
Friday, when the White House released a letter from his tax lawyers.
Trump has repeatedly denied having financial ties to Russia despite past statements by
himself and family members apparently to the contrary. He has also
refused to make his tax returns public, violating 40 years of precedent
and giving several excuses for doing so.
In the letter released on Friday but dated 8 March, Morgan Lewis tax
partners Sherri A Dillon and William F Nelson wrote that they had
reviewed Trump’s tax returns over the past 10 years and found that “with
a few exceptions” he had no income from Russian sources in that period.
The exceptions included selling a home to Russian billionaire for
$95m, twice what Trump paid for it three years before, and profits from
staging the Miss Universe contest in Moscow in 2013.
Trump has also worked closely with Russian-born businessman Felix Sater,
the managing director of a corporation called Bayrock, to develop the
Trump Soho hotel in New York. Bayrock was founded by Tevfik Arif, a
former Soviet official. In addition, Donald Trump Jr said in 2008 on
a visit to Moscow: “Russians make up a pretty disproportionate
cross-section of a lot of our assets.” He added that “we see a lot of
money pouring in from Russia”.
Comey has been asked to testify on Capitol Hill next Tuesday, over
the circumstances of his firing and his investigation into Russian
interference in the 2016 election.
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