Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sessions insists he’s staying at his post

Agenda overshadow­ed by Trump’s comments

- By Eric Tucker and Jonathan Lemire The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Attorney General Jeff Sessions, publicly skewered by his boss for stepping clear of the Russia-trump investigat­ions, declared Thursday he still loves his job and plans to stay on. Yet Donald Trump’s airing of his long-simmering frustratio­ns with Sessions raised significan­t new questions about the future of the nation’s top prosecutor.

The White House was quick to insist that the president “has confidence” in Sessions. The episode, however, underscore­d how the attorney general’s crime-fighting agenda is being overshadow­ed by his fractured relationsh­ip with Trump and the continuing investigat­ions into allegation­s of Russian ties to the Republican candidate’s presidenti­al campaign.

The challenges for Sessions were laid bare Thursday when the attorney general, at a Justice Department news conference to announce the takedown of a mammoth internet drug marketplac­e, faced zero questions about that case and was instead grilled on his reaction to being excoriated by Trump in a New York Times interview a day earlier.

The news conference on the drug case was quickly ended once it was clear reporters would only ask about the interview.

Sessions did not directly address his relationsh­ip to Trump except to say he was still carrying out the agenda of the president.

“I have the honor of serving as attorney general. It’s something that goes beyond any thought I would have ever had for myself,” Sessions said. “We love this job, we love this department, and I plan to continue to do so as long as that is appropriat­e.”

Asked how he could effectivel­y serve if he didn’t have Trump’s confidence, he responded, “We’re

serving right now. The work we’re doing today is the kind of work we intend to continue.”

Asked at the White House about Trump’s feelings on Sessions, spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said, “Clearly, he has confidence in him or he would not be the attorney general.”

 ?? Andrew Harnik ?? The Associated Press Attorney General Jeff Sessions, left, accompanie­d by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, speaks at a news conference Thursday at the Department of Justice.
Andrew Harnik The Associated Press Attorney General Jeff Sessions, left, accompanie­d by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, speaks at a news conference Thursday at the Department of Justice.

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