Mr.Micro wrote: » I would guess all the evidence is there. Mueller would be wise to make sure it has been shared and even leaked if things go pear shaped for him. I have said before it is truly bizarre that an individual being investigated can contol or stop any such investigations. The Americans really need to look at the power vested in POTUS, especially when he turns out to be bad and dangerous.
Peregrinus wrote: It's also quite likely that if Trump did succeed in firing Mueller, the House of Representatives would appoint their own special counsel to make the same investigation - if not immediately, then after the mid-term elections. And Trump, of course, can't fire a congressional appointee.
Trent Houseboat wrote: » No need to fire anyone when you control the media
Peregrinus wrote: » Trump asserts that he has the power to dismiss (or bring about the dismissal of) Mueller, but most commentators say no, he hasn't. One of the reasons, probably, why Trump hasn't yet tried to dismiss him is that he has been persuaded that the courts will strike down his attempts, or at least that his attempts will be mired in the courts for months and will do him more damage than good.
Peregrinus wrote: » It's also quite likely that if Trump did succeed in firing Mueller, the House of Representatives would appoint their own special counsel to make the same investigation - if not immediately, then after the mid-term elections. And Trump, of course, can't fire a congressional appointee.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » Yes, I have seen several commentators say that the worst case scenario is not that Mueller is fired, it is that Mueller delivers a damning report and nobody does anything about it. The Republicans in Congress yell "Fake News!" and bin the report. Then what do you do?
jooksavage wrote: » I just heard the latest one - Tim O'Brien (yes that Tim O'Brien) was downplaying the importance of the Cohen raid, basically saying MC wasnt really involved in the day-to-day stuff in the Trump orgsnisation and that Trump himself might not be that exposed. He did point out a few areas though where he thinks Trump is in real danger. One of those is NY DA Eric Schneidermans often forgotten investigation into Manafort. Even if Trump pardons Manafort on the federal charges, theres SFA he can do to help him out on state charges. And although President Trump cant be charged by state prosecutors, those charges could be waiting for him when he completes his term. Also he's certain Trump will try to fire Mueller but says its too late as Meuller has been sharing information through cooperation agreements with state prosecutors offices so the investigation is never going away, even if Meuller is.
everlast75 wrote: » You wait for the dems to take the majority and then revisit. Unless stormy gets to Trump first of course
alpahaeagle wrote: » Have you ever thought that muller is going on such a a wide arc of investgating that there is nothing to find?
notobtuse wrote: » According to a Marist Poll this week, Americans have an increasingly unfavorable view of Robert Mueller. The unfavorable opinion of the special counsel is at 30% of Americans,
notobtuse wrote: » According to a Marist Poll this week, Americans have an increasingly unfavorable view of Robert Mueller. The unfavorable opinion of the special counsel is at 30% of Americans, up from 20% in late March (and 38% of residents say they have either never heard of Mueller or are unsure how to rate him, which is shocking to me since the media have dedicated so much time to covering Mueller’s investigation, in between character assassinations of Trump, IMO). Mueller’s primary focus of the investigation was supposed to be Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election. IMO, it has become evident to many that his focus is anything but Russian interference and has taken to running a witch hunt. I say give Mueller a deadline of a couple months to come up with his conclusions as to his original mandate, which was Russian interference, or shut the special council down.
(a)Original jurisdiction. The jurisdiction of a Special Counsel shall be established by the Attorney General. The Special Counsel will be provided with a specific factual statement of the matter to be investigated. The jurisdiction of a Special Counsel shall also include the authority to investigate and prosecute federal crimes committed in the course of, and with intent to interfere with, the Special Counsel's investigation, such as perjury, obstruction of justice, destruction of evidence, and intimidation of witnesses; and to conduct appeals arising out of the matter being investigated and/or prosecuted.
Hurrache wrote: » notobtuse wrote: » According to a Marist Poll this week, Americans have an increasingly unfavorable view of Robert Mueller. The unfavorable opinion of the special counsel is at 30% of Americans, So what you're saying is Mueller is seen more favourably than Trump, or in your terms, American people have a bigger unfavourable view of Trump than Mueller.
Professor Moriarty wrote: » Zubeneschamali wrote: » Yes, I have seen several commentators say that the worst case scenario is not that Mueller is fired, it is that Mueller delivers a damning report and nobody does anything about it. The Republicans in Congress yell "Fake News!" and bin the report. Then what do you do? Not that I'd be defending the GOP, but not all GOP politicians are completely unprincipled. If the report is damning and has supporting evidence, then there are some GOP politicians who will do the right thing.
notobtuse wrote: » Apples and oranges when you figure in that 38% of people don't know who Mueller is or have no opinion.
notobtuse wrote: » IMO, it has become evident to many that his focus is anything but Russian interference and has taken to running a witch hunt .
VinLieger wrote: » notobtuse wrote: » IMO, it has become evident to many that his focus is anything but Russian interference and has taken to running a witch hunt . Aww and you were doing so well until you called it a witch hunt making it pretty obvious where you get your diet of bias info from
notobtuse wrote: » Yup... "investigation of the Russian government's efforts to interfere in the 2016 presidential election." That's what we were all led to believe. It's the 'small print' that turned it into a witch hunt, IMO.
notobtuse wrote: » Please tell me how many of the indictments Mueller has handed out so far involve the Russian government's efforts to interfere in the 2016 presidential election.
Professor Moriarty wrote: » But even if it has turned to other matters, so what? Obviously, given The Donald's insouciance and lack of opinion on the matter, there is nothing to hide. It's not like he's bothered about the investigation or what it might uncover. Otherwise he'd be tweeting about it. So, it's all good, isn't it?
Professor Moriarty wrote: » Ooops. My bad. This tweet three hours ago:Slippery James Comey, the worst FBI Director in history, was not fired because of the phony Russia investigation where, by the way, there was NO COLLUSION (except by the Dems)!
Water John wrote: » Mueller is not up for election. His public ratings matter, diddly squat. He has a job of work to do. It simply about right and wrong. Every politician and public servant, in America, should sign up to giving him, any help they can.
Leroy42 wrote: » notobtuse wrote: » Please tell me how many of the indictments Mueller has handed out so far involve the Russian government's efforts to interfere in the 2016 presidential election. 13. https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/feb/16/robert-mueller-russians-charged-election That is without looking into Manafort, Flynn etc which one could dig deeper into (as I think Mueller is). There is simply no doubt that Russia interfered. We also have the Trump Jr meeting, which even Trump Jr acknowledges was trying to get info through Russia to help with the campaign.