“To say that that’s the end of the investigation, that this is all that Donald Trump needs to fire (Deputy Attorney General Rod) Rosenstein or to fire (special counsel Robert) Mueller, I’ll just tell you, this could precipitate a constitutional crisis,” Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Illinois, said on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday.
The four-page memo alleges FBI abuses of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, accusing the agency of improperly using information paid for in part by Hillary Clinton’s campaign to obtain a FISA warrant for Trump campaign foreign policy adviser Carter Page. Trump has said the memo “totally vindicates” him in the Russia probe.
“If House Republicans believe that they’ve set the stage for this President to end this investigation, they are basically saying that in America, one man is above the law, and that’s not a fact,” Durbin added.
Last month, The New York Times reported that Trump tried to fire Mueller in June, though Trump denies this. And on Friday, Trump refused to say whether he would fire Rosenstein, who oversees the Russia investigation.
“You figure that one out,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office when asked about Rosenstein’s potential termination.
The firing of Mueller or Rosenstein would be “an extreme event” that “could lead to a confrontation we do not need in America,” Durbin said.
Durbin would not predict how Democrats would react if either official is fired, but stressed that Republicans would have to “stand up for the rule of law” in such a scenario.
“We understand what the Constitution says we must do, and that holds everyone in the United States, including the President of the United States, accountable if they’ve violated the law,” Durbin said.