President Donald Trump on Tuesday fired FBI director James
Comey, ousting the man heading a wide-ranging investigation into whether
his aides colluded with Russia to sway the 2016 US election.
In
a shock move that drew comparisons to the Watergate scandal that
brought down Richard Nixon, Trump told Comey the FBI needed new
leadership and he was being "terminated" with immediate effect.
Under
Comey's leadership, the FBI concluded that President Vladimir Putin
approved a wide-ranging campaign to tilt the vote in Trump's favour.
SNAP DISMISSAL
His
snap dismissal, ostensibly for mishandling a probe into Hillary
Clinton's emails, sparked rare criticism from Republicans and
allegations of a cover-up from seething Democrats who demanded an
independent inquiry.
The high-stakes gambit also raised immediate comparisons to the ill-fated firings that sped the collapse of Nixon's presidency.
Trump's
decision to fire the FBI director is virtually unprecedented, only one
director has previously been fired in the bureau's century-long history.
In
a letter circulated by the White House, Trump told Comey: "You are
hereby terminated and removed from office, effective immediately."
"It
is essential that we find new leadership for the FBI that restores
public trust and confidence in its vital law enforcement mission."
TROUBLED
Trump also used the letter to try to distance himself from the ever-deepening scandal over Russia's involvement in the election.
"I greatly appreciate you informing me, on three separate occasions, that I am not under investigation," Trump wrote.
The White House said the search for a new FBI director was to begin right away.
FBI directors are appointed for a single 10-year term.
The 56-year-old Comey, who is popular among rank-and-file agents, was appointed four years ago.
The top Democrat in the Senate, Chuck Schumer, said Trump had made a "big mistake."
"This does not seem a coincidence," he said.
RUSSIAN MEDDLING
Unless
the administration appoints an independent special prosecutor to probe
the Russian meddling, Schumer added, "every American will rightly
suspect that the decision to fire director Comey was part of a
cover-up."
Republicans, many of whom have fallen into
line behind Trump after initial reluctance, also sought to distance
themselves from the president.
"I am troubled by the timing and reasoning of Director Comey's termination," said Senator Richard Burr.
Congressman
Justin Amash, a fellow Republican, described parts of Trump's letter to
Comey as "bizarre" and announced "my staff and I are reviewing
legislation to establish an independent commission on Russia."
CONTROVERSIAL ROLE
Comey
played an outsized — and controversial — role on the American political
stage over the past year, lobbing one bombshell after another that
rankled both parties in Washington.
The stated reason
for his dismissal — according to a memo from Deputy Attorney-General Rod
Rosenstein — was for mishandling the probe into Clinton's emails, which
the Democrat blames for trashing her chances of becoming president.
Comey
told lawmakers last week he felt "mildly nauseous" at the thought that
he had swayed the election — but could not have acted any other way.
NOTHING LESS THAN NIXONIAN
Since the start of Trump's presidency, the FBI chief had increasingly appeared to be a thorn in the president's side.
He
recently confirmed the agency was investigating Russian interference in
the 2016 presidential election and notably Moscow's possible collusion
with Trump's campaign.
Democrats — already angry that
Congressional inquiries into Russian meddling have been hamstrung by
Republicans' willingness to defend Trump — voiced sharp concerns that
the FBI's investigation may now be in jeopardy too, with several calling
for an independent commission to take over the probe.
"This
is nothing less than Nixonian," charged Senator Patrick Leahy of
Vermont, who called Trump's official justification for firing Comey
"absurd."
INVESTIGATIONS
"That
fig leaf explanation seeks to cover the undeniable truth: The president
has removed the sitting FBI director in the midst of one of the most
critical national security investigations in the history of our country —
one that implicates senior officials in the Trump campaign and
administration," he charged.
When Trump initially
decided to keep Comey — a Barack Obama appointee — in his job, it raised
eyebrows from critics who saw it as a tacit reward for his role in
damaging Clinton's chances.
But within months, the FBI chief was back in the national spotlight — this time taking aim at Trump.
During
testimony to Congress last month, Comey overtly challenged the
president, flatly rejecting his explosive claim that he was wiretapped
by his predecessor.
And despite Trump's dismissal of
suggestions his team colluded with Moscow as "fake news," it had become
increasingly clear that Comey had set his sights on the issue of
Russia's election meddling, which has stalked Trump's presidency from
the start.
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