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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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FBI needs protection from White House

The following editorial is from the Washington Post.

The FBI is in trouble and must be protected – from the White House, first and foremost.

Last year’s Hillary Clinton email investigation put the agency in the middle of a political fight. President Donald Trump raised even bigger concerns for the agency’s independence when he fired Director James Comey on Tuesday.

At first Trump and his staff claimed he moved against Comey based on a Tuesday memo from Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein condemning Comey’s handling of the Clinton email probe. On Thursday, Trump admitted in an NBC interview that “I was going to fire regardless of recommendation,” calling Comey a “showboat” and a “grandstander.” Reports suggest that Comey infuriated Trump with his investigation and discussion of Moscow’s meddling in the 2016 election.

Trump also claimed Thursday that he asked Comey at one point if he was the subject of an FBI investigation, and that Comey said no. If true, both the question and the answer ring alarm bells: Federal law enforcement should be insulated from all political interference and, when the administration is a subject of a probe, walled off from the White House. But Trump administration officials reportedly have prodded the FBI to prioritize investigations of alleged leaking over Russia’s hacking.

The disorderly firing process and shifting rationales have shredded what was left of this White House’s credibility. A strong chief of staff or White House Counsel’s Office would have insisted on a well-prepared and carefully defended process to remove the FBI director if that were necessary – and would have counseled against doing it at all while the director was ramping up an investigation of Trump’s campaign. Instead, Trump’s worst instincts were enabled by everyone around him.

It is essential that this White House not be allowed to export its credibility-destroying dysfunction to the Justice Department and the FBI. Attorney General Jeff Sessions promised in March not to be involved in “any matters related in any way to the campaigns for president of the United States,” a commitment already called into question by his involvement in Comey’s termination, as the Post outlined Thursday. It must be clear that Rosenstein will have final say on the FBI’s Russia inquiries.

Rosenstein and the Senate, meanwhile, must ensure that those chosen to lead the FBI – either on an interim or a full-time basis – are committed to preserving the agency’s independence. During a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing Thursday, acting FBI director Andrew McCabe presented a baseline of integrity against which to judge a future nominee. McCabe said that the FBI will not update the White House on the Russia investigations and promised to tell Congress if the White House tries to interfere. By insisting that FBI staff respected Comey and that the Russia probe is “highly significant,” he implied by example that a good FBI director should have the confidence to contradict administration spin. Protecting the agency’s independence must be the next director’s mission.