Schiff: ‘Abundantly clear’ Sessions was forced out for not ending Mueller probe

Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) argued Wednesday that outgoing Attorney General Jeff Sessions submitted his resignation because he failed to end special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation.

Schiff, who is poised to become chairman of the House Intelligence Committee after Democrats won the House in the midterms on Tuesday, added in a statement that Sessions’s ouster places Mueller’s probe into Russian election interference in “new and immediate peril.”

{mosads}”It is abundantly clear that Sessions was forced out for following the advice of ethics lawyers at the Department of Justice and recusing himself from the Russia probe, and for failing to bring about an end to an investigation that has produced multiple indictments and convictions and may implicate the President or others around him,” Schiff said.

The statement from Schiff came just hours after Sessions issued his resignation at President Trump’s request. Trump announced on Twitter that Matthew Whitaker, Sessions’s chief of staff, would take over as acting attorney general.

The decision means that Whitaker, who has been publicly critical of certain elements of Mueller’s probe, will oversee the investigation. 

“Whitaker, who the President announced will serve as Acting Attorney General, has been publicly critical of Special Counsel Mueller and has argued, without legal basis, that the Special Counsel is prohibited from investigating the President’s finances even if they are relevant to the Russia probe,” Schiff said. “In fact, this may be precisely why the President has chosen to put Whitaker in this role.”

Schiff concluded by saying that any interference in Mueller’s probe would “cause a constitutional crisis.” 

Multiple Democratic lawmakers echoed Schiff’s remarks in the hours following Sessions’ ouster. Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.), who is set to become the House Judiciary Committee chairman, said that Americans “must have answers immediately” on why Sessions resigned. 

The congressman also said Tuesday night that Trump was about to learn “that he’s not above the law.”

Trump has repeatedly called Mueller’s probe a “witch hunt,” and on Wednesday said he could fire everybody with ties to if if he wanted. But he added that he would not do that for political reasons. 

Tags Adam Schiff Donald Trump Jeff Sessions Jerry Nadler Robert Mueller

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