Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein
Grilled On Capital Hill Over Mueller Probe: Rosenstein Praises Mueller,
Probe And Avoids Questions About Mueller's Team
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein
stood by Special Counsel Robert Mueller's Russia probe Wednesday,
despite a newly unearthed trove of damning text messages and other
details that Republicans said show an “insider bias” on the
investigative team.
Rosenstein, who appointed Mueller and has overseen the Russia probe
since Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself, testified before
the House Judiciary Committee -- and faced a grilling from GOP
lawmakers.
They zeroed in on anti-Trump text messages exchanged between two FBI
agents who once worked on the Mueller team.
“This is unbelievable,” said Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, voicing concern
that the "public trust" in the probe is gone.
Republicans for weeks have raised concerns that some investigators may
be biased, citing everything from their political donations to past work
representing top Democratic figures and allied groups including the
Clinton Foundation.
GOP members of the House Judiciary Committee press Deputy Attorney
General Rod Rosenstein over political bias exhibited in texts between
FBI officials Peter Strzok and Lisa Page; chief intelligence
correspondent Catherine Herridge reports from Capitol Hill.
But when committee Ranking Member Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., pressed
Rosenstein over whether he had seen “good cause” to remove Mueller from
his post, Rosenstein pushed back.
“No,” Rosenstein said.
Nadler asked whether Rosenstein would fire Mueller if he were ordered to
do so.
“I would follow regulation. If there were good cause, I would act. If
there was no good cause, I would not,” Rosenstein replied, doubling down
that he has seen “no good cause” to do so.
He suggested the probe -- of Russian interference in the 2016 election
and possible collusion with Trump associates -- is being conducted
appropriately at this stage.
But just hours prior to Rosenstein’s testimony, the Justice Department
released hundreds of texts messages between two FBI officials—Peter
Strzok and Lisa Page—who worked on Mueller’s team and were romantically
involved. Many were anti-Trump and pro-Clinton.
In one exchange from August 2016, Page forwarded a Donald Trump-related
article to Strzok, writing: “And maybe you’re meant to stay where you
are because you’re meant to protect the country from that menace.”
He responded: “Thanks. It’s
absolutely true that we’re both very fortunate. And of course I’ll try
and approach it that way. I just know it will be tough at times. I can
protect our country at many levels, not sure if that helps.’”
In March 2016, Page texted Strzok, "God, Trump is a loathsome human."
"Yet he many[sic] win," Strzok responded. "Good for Hillary."
Later the same day, Strzok texted Page, "Omg [Trump's] an idiot."
"He's awful," Page answered.
The messages were given to the House Judiciary Committee. The officials
no longer work on the Mueller probe.
Rep. Jordan said of Strzok, "This guy thought he was super agent James
Bond at the FBI."
“We are now beginning to understand the magnitude of this insider bias
on Mueller’s team,” Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., said in his
opening statement on Wednesday. He cited the “extreme bias” shown in the
text messages between Strzok and Page; Mueller investigator Andrew
Weissmann’s “awe” of former acting Attorney General Sally Yates for
defying President Trump; and Mueller investigator Jeannie Rhee’s
representation of the Clinton Foundation. He also cited the case of
another DOJ official demoted amid scrutiny of his contacts with the firm
behind the anti-Trump dossier.
“Aren’t DOJ attorneys advised to avoid even the ‘appearance of
impropriety’?” Goodlatte asked, calling the “potential bias” of certain
career Justice Department officials and lawyers on Mueller’s team
“deeply troubling.” “DOJ investigations must not be tainted by
individuals imposing their own political prejudices.”
Rosenstein told lawmakers that he has “discussed this with Robert
Mueller.”
“It’s our responsibility to make sure those opinions do not influence
their actions,” Rosenstein said. “I believe Director Mueller understands
that, and recognizes people have political views but that they don’t let
it [affect their work.]”
Rep. Steve Chabot, R-Ohio, pushed back, calling the appearance “sad.”
“Rather than wearing stripes like a referee, the Mueller team
overwhelmingly ought to be attired with Democratic donkeys or Hillary
t-shirts, not shirts that say ‘Make America Great Again,’ because I
think the American people deserve more than the very biased team they
have under Mueller,” Chabot said. “It’s really sad.”
But Rosenstein defended Mueller’s investigation, stressing he has
“oversight authority” over Mueller.
“I know what he’s doing,” Rosenstein said of Mueller’s investigative
actions. “He consults with me about their investigation, within and
without the scope.”
When pressed over whether Mueller has
attempted to “expand” the original scope of his investigation,
Rosenstein said that he had given his “permission” to Mueller to
investigate what he requests if necessary, noting that the special
counsel team “does have authority” to investigate “obstruction.”
“If I thought he was doing something inappropriate, I would take
action,” Rosenstein said.
In terms of any potential “impropriety” in Mueller’s office, cited by
multiple committee Republicans, Rosenstein said he was not aware.
“I am not aware of any impropriety. Special Counsel is subject to
oversight by the Department of Justice and I’m not aware of any
violations of those rules,” Rosenstein said. “Appearance is, to some
extent, in the eye of the beholder. We apply the department’s rules and
regulations, and career ethics attorneys provide us counsel on that.”
Rosenstein underscored that he, Mueller and FBI Director Chris Wray are
"accountable" and will ensure "no bias" in the special counsel's
findings.
Brooke Singman is a Politics Reporter for Fox News. Follow her on
Twitter at @brookefoxnews.