The argument still rages about whether this is the rabbit hole we are decending, or simply the drain.
Trump Is Flirting with Another Constitutional CrisisIs the president really considering firing special counsel Robert Mueller?On Monday, luxuriating in the glow of a keenly trained bank of news cameras, Donald Trump presided over his first full Cabinet meeting, a ceremony described by New York Times reporter Glenn Thrush as “the most exquisitely awkward public event I’ve ever seen.” One by one, in a display of choking effulgence, Trump’s team pledged loyalty. “What an incredible honor it is to lead the Department of Health and Human Services at this pivotal time under your leadership,” gushed Tom Price, secretary of health and human services, shortly after the Republican health-care bill perilously collapsed. “My hat’s off to you,” squeaked Secretary of Energy Rick Perry, in the wake of Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement. With the concept of irony safely strangled, Trump’s zany outburst of praise for his own presidency was greeted with somber affinity. “I think we’ve been about as active as you can possibly be and at a just about record-setting pace,” he said.
It is in this environment of slavish sycophancy that the rumor that Trump is considering firing special counsel Robert S. Mueller, an otherwise unthinkable attack on the independence of the Justice Department, quickly gained currency, igniting a Monday evening media firestorm. The claim, notably, did not come from the White House but Christopher Ruddy, chief executive of Newsmax media and a longtime friend of Trump. Speaking in an interview with PBS on Monday, Ruddy said the president was “considering, perhaps, terminating the special counsel” because of concerns about conflicts of interest. “He’s weighing that option,” said Ruddy. “I personally think it would be a very significant mistake—even though I don’t think there’s a justification . . . for a special counsel in this case.”
Hours after the interview, White House press secretary Sean Spicer released a statement that did not deny the claim, but said, firmly yet evasively, “Mr. Ruddy never spoke to the president regarding this issue. With respect to this subject, only the president or his attorneys are authorized to comment.” It has been suggested that Ruddy based his judgment on comments made over the weekend by members of Trump’s personal legal team.
Trump, as the Times points out, is known for his propensity to throw flimsy, anger-fueled threats at members of his team, which are often leaked. For weeks, speculation of an imminent senior staff reshuffle has plagued the White House, which perhaps accounts for Reince Priebus, Trump’s chief of staff, who has allegedly been given an ultimatum to get the White House under control or lose his job, declaring that it is a “blessing” to work for the president at the aforementioned communion of the Trumpian cult.
At the same time, pressure has been building on the White House from the far right to fight back harder against Mueller as the Justice Department closes in on Trump and his inner circle. “Republicans are delusional if they think the special counsel is going to be fair,” tweeted former House speaker and current Trump biographer Newt Gingrich. “Time to rethink.” Conservative gadfly Ann Coulter argued, “Now that we FINALLY got Comey to admit Trump not under investigation, Sessions should fire Mueller. Why do we need a special counsel now?” Other Trump allies oppose the investigation through a thread of interlinked objections: that Mueller’s probe is unnecessary, that he is hiring an assemblage of biased attorneys who have donated to the Democrats in the past, and that his close relationship with Comey is compromising. In a volley of hostility, last week media personality Rush Limbaugh took to the radio endorsing the suggestion for Trump to fire Mueller. Mark Levin, another radio host, also called for his firing. “Mueller must step aside,” he wrote on Facebook over the weekend.
Despite Spicer distancing the White House from Ruddy’s allegations, Trump does have the power to sack Mueller. He could either ask Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to fire him, or, if Rosenstein refuses, repeal the regulations that govern the appointment and fire him himself—a scenario that would echo Nixon’s notorious Saturday Night Massacre. And Spicer’s denials are belied by the shock firing of F.B.I. Director James Comey, who only learned of his dismissal after catching snatches of a newsflash as he delivered a speech to bureau employees in Los Angeles.
Still, the rumor has been met with widespread skepticism. The political implications of firing Mueller would be meteoric, and perhaps too self-destructive even for Trump. Not only would it demonstrate an overly muscular declaration that the president is willing to dismiss anyone who poses a personal threat, it would also suggest that he is nervous about what Mueller might uncover in the ongoing Russia probe, in which Comey testified, damningly, last week. Asked whether he felt Trump’s behavior amounts to obstruction of justice, he replied: “I don’t know, that’s Bob Mueller’s job to sort that out.”
“Can you think of one thing that Trump could do worse than fire Bob Mueller?” asked John ‘Mac’ Stipanovich, a veteran G.O.P. operative. “It would be catastrophic for him. Not uncharacteristic, but catastrophic.” He was bolstered by Republican Peter Wehner, an adversary of Trump, who described the idea of firing Mueller as “a very Trumpian tactic.” It would, he added, “be a political bombshell and it would be close to an admission of guilt.”
As Jeff Sessions is set to testify in the ongoing Russia investigation Tuesday, this much is clear: while Mueller and his team expand their probe and edge ever closer to Trump, they will continue to field an onslaught not just from the president, but from his band of supporters. And if establishment Republicans think Trump would never fire Mueller, they ought to watch the video of the president’s cringing Cabinet, all enabling the president’s worst impulses, and then do some serious self-reflection themselves.
http://www.vanityfair.com/news/2017/06/trump-is-flirting-with-another-constitutional-crisis