Friday, December 21, 2018

Whitaker isn't performing to expectations

President Donald Trump has at least twice in the past few weeks vented to his acting attorney general, angered by federal prosecutors who referenced the President's actions in crimes his former lawyer Michael Cohen pleaded guilty to, according to multiple sources familiar with the matter.

Trump was frustrated, the sources said, that prosecutors Matt Whitaker oversees filed charges that made Trump look bad.
  CNN
Whitaker was supposed to curtail the prosecutors' activity. That wouldn't be obstruction of justice, I guess. Trump's new butt boy.
The first known instance took place when Trump made his displeasure clear to acting attorney general Matt Whitaker after Cohen pleaded guilty November 29 to lying to Congress about a proposed Trump Tower project in Moscow. Whitaker had only been on the job a few weeks following Trump's firing of Jeff Sessions.

Over a week later, Trump again voiced his anger at Whitaker after prosecutors in Manhattan officially implicated the President in a hush-money scheme to buy the silence of women around the 2016 campaign -- something Trump fiercely maintains isn't an illegal campaign contribution. Pointing to articles he said supported his position, Trump pressed Whitaker on why more wasn't being done to control prosecutors in New York who brought the charges in the first place, suggesting they were going rogue.

The previously unreported discussions between Trump and Whitaker described by multiple sources familiar with the matter underscore the extent to which the President firmly believes the attorney general of the United States should serve as his personal protector.

[...]

Trump has already shown a willingness to use the Justice Department to settle political scores. As CNN previously reported, the President questioned Whitaker about the progression of the investigation against Hillary Clinton when Whitaker was Jeff Sessions' chief of staff.

"It seems very clear that the only reason that Matt Whitaker was ever appointed to this role was specifically to oversee the Mueller investigation," Mueller biographer Garrett Graff said on Friday in an interview on CNN's Newsroom.
Whitaker's not going to get my sympathy. He lobbied for the job, and he was well aware of how Trump treated Sessions. If he's got no more pride than Sessions, he deserves his whippings.
One source close to Whitaker pushed back on the notion that the Cohen situation caused tension between the two, emphasizing that Whitaker and the President have a "great relationship."
Sounds like.



Indeed, and yet another piece of evidence supporting any obstruction of justice charges Mueller might levy.

...but hey, do what you want...you will anyway.

UPDATE:



This strikes me as accurate.

UPDATE:



Renato Mariotti is a former federal prosecutor.



UPDATE 12/24:

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