Mueller’s Picks To Help Lead Russia Probe Raise Questions Over Impartiality

WASHINGTON (AP) โ€” High-profile supporters of President Donald Trump are turning on special counsel Robert Mueller, the man charged with investigating Russian interference in the U.S. election and possible collusion with Trumpโ€™s campaign.

As Mueller builds his legal team, Trumpโ€™s allies have begun raising questions about the former FBI directorโ€™s impartiality, suggesting he cannot be trusted to lead the probe. The comments come amid increasing frustration at the White House and among Trump supporters that the investigation will overshadow the presidentโ€™s agenda for months to come โ€” a prospect that has Democrats salivating.

Trump cannot directly dismiss Mueller. That decision would fall to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who testified Tuesday in a Senate budget hearing that he would only fire Mueller for good cause and has seen no evidence of that.

Still, Chris Ruddy, the CEO of Newsmax and a Trump friend, suggested the president was already thinking about โ€œterminatingโ€ Mueller from his position as special counsel.

โ€œI think heโ€™s weighing that option,โ€ Ruddy said in an interview Monday with Judy Woodruff of โ€œPBS NewsHour.โ€

House Speaker Paul Ryan told reporters Tuesday any talk about Trump wanting to rid himself of the special investigator amounts to โ€œrumor.โ€

Yet itโ€™s a line of thinking that is making its way to the presidentโ€™s ears.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said Tuesday that Trump called him Monday night because of Gingrichโ€™s concerns about the Russia probe.

He called because โ€œI have been very clearโ€ about Mueller and the lawyers heโ€™s hired amounting to a โ€œrigged game,โ€ Gingrich said in an interview Tuesday on CBS.

โ€œItโ€™s a mistake to pretend that this is going to be some neutral investigation,โ€ Gingrich said.

Even so, Gingrich said, Trump wonโ€™t seek to dismiss Mueller because heโ€™s confident the probe will conclude heโ€™s done nothing wrong.

Rosenstein is charged with Muellerโ€™s fate because Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself from all matters having to do with the Trump-Russia investigation. Sessions made that choice because of his own conversations with Russian officials during the Trump transition โ€” a potential part of the probe.

Rep. Adam Schiff, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence committee, said any move to oust Mueller would โ€œbe the last strawโ€ for many in Congress and would have โ€œechoes of Watergate,โ€ when President Richard Nixon dismissed special prosecutor Archibald Cox over Coxโ€™s subpoenas for White House tapes.

Schiff told MSNBCโ€™s โ€œMorning Joeโ€ on Tuesday that โ€œI donโ€™t think the Congress would sit still and allow the president to pick his own investigator.โ€

Just weeks ago, Gingrich had heaped praise on Mueller, hailing him as a โ€œsuperb choiceโ€ for special counsel whose reputation was โ€œimpeccable for honesty and integrity.โ€

But after the testimony of former FBI Director James Comey last week, Gingrich said heโ€™d changed his mind. Gingrich said he is troubled by Democratic donations of Muellerโ€™s picks to help lead the probe.

Conservative commentator Ann Coulter offered a similar message, tweeting, โ€œNow that we know TRUMP IS NOT UNDER INVESTIGATION, Sessions should take it back & fire Mueller.โ€

The new talk about dismissing Mueller appeared to be coming from Trump allies โ€” including some close to White House strategist Steve Bannon โ€” who are increasingly frustrated with the prospect of a long and winding probe.

They say Trump did not collude with Russia and see the investigation as a politically motivated sham that handicaps Trumpโ€™s ability to execute his agenda, according to one person who advises the White House on how to handle the probe. The person demanded anonymity to discuss strategy on the sensitive matter.

Ruddy appeared to be basing his remarks, at least in part, on comments from Jay Sekulow, a member of Trumpโ€™s legal team, who told ABC in an interview Sunday that he was โ€œnot going to speculateโ€ on whether Trump might at some point order Rosenstein to fire Mueller.

โ€œLook, the president of the United States, as we all know, is a unitary executive. But the president is going to seek the advice of his counsel and inside the government as well as outside. And Iโ€™m not going to speculate on what he will or will not do,โ€ Sekulow said. Still, he added, โ€œI canโ€™t imagine that that issue is going to arise.โ€

It wasnโ€™t clear whether Ruddy, who speaks with the president often, was basing his remarks on a specific conversation with the president or entirely on Sekulowโ€™s comments. Ruddy did not immediately respond to questions seeking clarification.

Ruddy was at the White House Monday to meet with White House aides, but did not speak with the president, Press Secretary Sean Spicer said. โ€œMr. Ruddy never spoke to the president regarding this issue,โ€ Spicer said. โ€œWith respect to this subject, only the president or his attorneys are authorized to comment.โ€

White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said via email, โ€œChris speaks for himself.โ€

Peter Carr, a spokesman for Mueller, declined to comment on Ruddyโ€™s remarks.