IranPress/America: Donald Trump in an Oval Office interview with Hill.TV, accused Jeff Sessions of doing poorly in several facets of his job and said, "I don't have an attorney general, It's very sad."
“I’m not happy at the border, I’m not happy with numerous things, not just this,” he said. Trump suggested he had a personal blind spot when it came to nominating Sessions as the nation’s top law enforcement officer.
“I’m so sad over Jeff Sessions because he came to me. He was the first Senator that endorsed me. And he wanted to be Attorney General, and I didn’t see it,” he said.
Previously, Donald Trump said in his interview with Fox news, "I put in an attorney general that never took control of the Justice Department. Jeff Sessions never took control of the Justice Department and it's a sort of an incredible thing."
Trump's war of word with his own Attorney General is after separate legal hammers dropped nearly simultaneously on two former members of his inner circle.
Michael Cohen, his longtime lawyer and “fixer”, pleaded guilty to eight charges , including campaign finance violations and directly implicated Trump in paying “hush money” to women with whom he allegedly had affairs.
Just minutes earlier, Paul Manafort, the president’s former campaign chairman, was convicted on eight charges of bank and tax fraud. The dual courtroom dramas set up a moment or rare peril for the president.
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Sessions has punched back US president's attacks on him and said the justice department he heads will not bend to political pressure.
But Sessions is not the only one who disconnect with his boss, Trump and US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis often appear at odds on key policies.
US Defense Secretary on Tuesday flatly dismissed reports suggesting he may be leaving President Donald Trump’s administration in the coming months
Mattis has become a focus in media stories in recent weeks about the Trump administration, particularly after the release of a book this month by Watergate reporter Bob Woodward that portrayed Mattis privately disparaging Trump to associates.
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A growing number of people have left the US administration since Trump moved into the Oval Office – a group that includes Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, national security advisor H.R. McMaster, FBI director James Comey, chief strategist Steve Bannon.
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US president’s need for loyalty and his incessant demands for it are becoming hallmark characteristics of his presidency, in ways that will increasingly define not just his relationship with those who work for him but also Republicans in Congress and the entire GOP.
Trump seems to be hiring people who will be loyal to him — and getting rid of those who won’t.
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