Trump warms to Sessions after stinging public criticism
BY Agencies6 Aug 2017 5:32 PM GMT
Agencies6 Aug 2017 5:32 PM GMT
US President Donald Trump had some warm words for Attorney General Jeff Sessions after weeks of publicly slamming him as weak.
"After many years of LEAKS going on in Washington, it is great to see the AG taking action! For National Security, the tougher the better!" Trump wrote on Twitter from his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey.
Sessions had been the public target of the president's anger recently because he had recused himself from a probe into allegations that Trump's aides coordinated with Russia to tilt last year's election in his favor.
At one point, Trump told The New York Times he would never have appointed Sessions had he known he would recuse himself. Trump also took to Twitter to blast Sessions as "VERY weak," among other criticisms on social media.
The attacks were widely seen as designed to force Sessions into resigning. However, the former Alabama senator appeared to be on Trump's good side yesterday after launching a high-profile campaign to crack down on government employees who leak classified or sensitive information to the media. The action comes after a spate of scoops — many of them unfavorable— about the Trump administration.
"I strongly agree with the president and condemn in the strongest terms the staggering number of leaks undermining the ability of our government to protect this country," Sessions told a press conference on Friday.
Trump, who once asked "what's the point" of vacations and often admonished his presidential predecessor Barack Obama for taking them while in office, also pushed back on reports that his 17-day stay at his beloved Bedminster resort was a holiday.
"Working in Bedminster, NJ, as long planned construction is being done at the White House. This is not a vacation - meetings and calls!" he tweeted. The White House has said Trump's Bedminster stay would be a "working vacation," and cited scheduled upgrades of the West Wing's creaky heating and cooling system during the steamy Washington summer as a reason why Trump was leaving town. The massive facility with 36 holes of golf is where Trump's daughter Ivanka wed and where he reportedly thought of being buried.
Meanwhile, one of the top officials at the US justice department said on Sunday that the agency's heightened focus on policing leaks of classified information is not intended to put journalists in legal jeopardy.
Speaking to Fox News Sunday, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein emphasized that the department's renewed effort to prosecute leaks of classified information was not aimed at the news media.
"We're after the leakers, not the journalists," he said. "We don't prosecute journalists for doing their jobs."
Rosenstein would not rule out charging journalists altogether, saying reporters could face charges if they deliberately violated the law.
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