![]() ![]() Q: Mueller has announced the formal closure of the special counsel office and his resignation from the justice department. He doesn’t want them to be forced to choose between political “sound bites.” Mueller wants every American to read every word of the report. Mueller, at his press availability, made it very, very clear that we should focus on the carefully crafted, very strong language in the report. Those battles have ended with damaged reputations for anyone who has gotten into a personal conflict with Trump for the past 35 years. He does not want to get into a personal political war with Donald Trump. He wants to investigation and the report to be his legacy. How do you look at this, and how is the Congress going to react to this that he doesn’t want to testify?Ī: Mueller is a rare public figure in America who wants his words to speak for him. Q: Mueller said he did “not believe it is appropriate” for him to testify before Congress, as House Democrats have asked. Q: What do you make of the division within the Democratic Party on this issue?Ī: The party is divided between pragmatists, who want the House of Representatives to focus on policy issues and want Democrats to focus on electoral success, and idealists and ideologues who believe that Trump is a liar, a crook, a scoundrel, a mad king, a Russian dupe, an unfit charlatan, or some combination of those things. The same thing happened with Bill Clinton in 1999. Democratic congressional leaders want to focus the party’s efforts on defeating Trump at the ballot box in 2020 rather than impeaching him, which they could do, but there is no chance of convicting him in a Republican Senate. And other simply agree with Trump’s ends and his tactics. Some want to use their power in Washington to pursue their policy goals. ![]() Some are afraid of being defeated in primaries. The reason is that Republicans remain scared to death of Trump and his supporters. Q: Three more democrats are calling for impeachment, and one Republican has been calling for Trump’s impeachment, do you think the momentum will grow after Mueller’s speech?Ī: The momentum is building slowly. Mueller did strongly suggest that it is up to Congress at this present time to formally accuse a sitting president, because the Trump Justice Department will not. The question of whether a sitting president may be charged criminally during his or her presidency may be decided by a court at some point. He said the Justice Department policy is clear and that he abided by that policy. Q: In Mueller’s speech, he detailed 10 instances where Trump had possibly attempted to impede the investigation, but said the Constitution requires a process other than the criminal justice system to formally accuse a sitting president of wrongdoing.” Is he indicating an impeachment process?Ī: Not exactly. electoral process, and he cannot and will not clear Donald Trump of attempting to obstruct justice. The two points Mueller made abundantly clear: There was, and is, ongoing Russian interference in the U.S. But the words were very damaging to Barr’s credibility among open-minded Americans, although in a deeply divided country, I’m not sure how many people are open to changing their minds about anything relating to Trump. Mueller was precise and diplomatic in his wording. ![]() Q: What’s your takeaway from Robert Mueller’s eight-minute statement?Ī: Robert Mueller made clear that he believed Trump’s attorney general, William Barr, misstated the findings of the report when Barr claimed that Trump had been cleared of wrongdoing. Here is a Q&A based on my interview on China Radio International. In eight minutes of words, as carefully scripted as his previous silence, Mueller delivered a message radically different in tone and substance than the Trumpian tweets about a “Russia hoax” and the president’s insistence that there was “no collusion.” Two months after Mueller delivered a 448-page report to Attorney General William Barr, he closed up shop and left his job as Special Counsel. Justice Department building on May 30, 2019Īfter two years of carefully scripted public silence, Robert Mueller spoke on May 30. Robert Mueller reads a statement to reporters at the U.S. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |