tstorm823 said:
Those things aren't hearsay, they also aren't things that suggest he was trying to undermine or end the investigation. The hearsay is all the stories we've gotten over the past 2 years claiming things like "Trump in private says he's gonna fire Mueller and pardon himself". Your list is just bad evidence for your claim.
Circumstantial evidence, perhaps. But not bad evidence.
To your other points:
1) Aside from the fact that the FBI itself disputes the White House's characterization of Comey, it's also very telling that the message you're citing is
not the message they started with. Point of fact, the stated rationale changed quite frequently in the wake of Comey's firing. Your rationale here is actually quite perplexing as firing Comey the wake of him asking for more resources for the investigation (the DoJ denies that such a request was ever made), that's actually more damning, not less, as it provides circumstantial evidence for an attempt to stop the investigation, cutting off the head of the snake, as it were.
2) Sessions recused himself because as a prominent member of Trump's election campaign, he was by necessity too close to a case focusing on Trump's team. Recusal is standard operating procedure under circumstances wherein the judge might even be
perceived to have a vested interest in one outcome or another, or otherwise have a conflict of interest, and Sessions did so at the advice of the Justice Department.
And don't be obtuse. The implication isn't that Trump "had hands-on power over the investigation after Sessions was gone". The implication is that he wanted someone as AG who would influence the investigation in his favor, as further suggested by him reportedly telling his aides that he needed a loyalist overseeing the investigation. See also how the people he subsequently considered for the position being very vocal proponents of swiftly ending (or sabotaging, in the case of Whitaker's suggestion of quietly ending it by defunding it) the investigation. Ie, we have reason to believe that he wanted someone on the bench who would bury the investigation for him.
3) We're talking about Comey, not Cohen. Cohen is non-sequitur. If you're actually referring to Comey, you've got no reason to doubt him so severely.
4) You mean besides the claim that Sr. didn't even know about the meeting? Besides the statement strongly implying that the meeting wasn't arranged for the purpose of getting political dirt, but that the adoption talk was the goal all along? Besides Jr, Kushner, and Trump's lawyers allegedly favoring a more accurate statement only to be overruled by Trump, who favored the misleading variation we got?
5) To the overall point: No, it's not reasonable to tell your advisors to pen up a reason that would justify your decision fire someone. And that Trump did that is a matter of public record. He has since admitted in interviews that he was going to fire Comey regardless of what Rosenstein wrote. And I quote:
"Monday you met with the Deputy Attorney General, Rod Rosenstein"
"Right".
"Did you ask for a recommendation?"
"What I did is - I was going to fire Comey. My decision, it was not-"
"You had made the decision before they came in the room?"
"I was going to fire Comey. There is no good time to do it, by the way."
"Because in your letter you said that 'I accepted their recommendation', so you had already made the decision?"
"Oh, I was going to fire regardless of recommendation."
To borrow from fiction for a moment, have you ever seen A Few Good Men or Philadelphia? Because, if so, the chain of events should seem remarkably familiar.
To the point of why I think it looks bad: I think it looks bad because we know that Stephen Miller drafted the letter of dismissal for Comey on March 7. We know that when Trump shared it with Kushner, McGahn, and Pence on March 8, McGahn objected to it and bounced it over to Rosenstein to write a more defensible one. We know from Rosenstein's own account that Trump ordered to write the memo, and that he had to go against Trump's wishes to reference Russia in the memo.
I think it looks bad because the very next day Trump said that he felt that he felt that firing Comey took a great pressure off of him with regards to Russia, and because a few days after that in an NBC interview he admitted that the investigation was part of his rationale for firing Comey. I think it looks bad because Trump tweeting that Comey better hope that there were no secret recordings of their meetings sounds suspiciously like attempted witness tampering.
I think it looks bad because FBI sources have claimed that Comey was fired because he refused to end the investigation (and yes, that one is hearsay). I think it looks bad because of White House officials probing whether they could actually ask Comey to shut down the investigation into Flynn.
So no, I do not "only think this looks bad because you're judging it on the basis that Comey didn't deserve to fired and Trump was makiong up excuses to try and end the investigation". I think this looks bad because while you might dismiss any one piece of evidence as coincidental, at this point suggesting that all these points were incidental and coincidentally suggested the same conclusion strains credulity.