Following President Donald J. Trump’s tweet storm this weekend attacking Special Prosecutor Robert Mueller’s probe into any collusion between the administration and Russia during the 2016 election, U.S. Representative Lee Zeldin has sent out his own missive supporting the president’s position.
“Mueller [investigation] can’t go on indefinitely,” Mr. Zeldin tweeted on Sunday evening. “@realDonaldTrump has provided tens of thousands of documents & his team has further cooperated with their many interviews.
“I haven’t heard of anyone coming across any evidence POTUS colluded with the Russians,” he continued. “Mueller should end [investigation] into POTUS so USA can move forward in positive & productive direction to tackle the many important policy issues facing USA.
“It would be injustice to continue investigating POTUS & family for winning [elections] without any evidence of crime committed to win [elections].”
Mr. Zeldin declined to further expand on these tweets when contacted on Monday. Through a spokesman, he later provided a statement reiterating the statements in the tweet, adding, “The Trump-Russia collusion investigation should come to an end after a careful review of all relevant information. However … you cannot have a never-ending probe.”
The tweets came after U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions fired Federal Bureau of Investigation Deputy Director Andrew McCabe Friday evening, on the grounds that he had “lacked candor—including under oath—on multiple occasions.” Some, including Mr. McCabe, argue that the firing was actually due to the administration’s concerns about the Russia investigation, with which Mr. McCabe has been involved from the beginning and whose conversations, especially with fired former FBI Director James Comey, are part of the pool of evidence.
Mr. McCabe argues that this abrupt termination is an attempt to taint his credibility, thus making all of his contributions to the Russia investigation suspect.
Since the firing, some prominent Republicans—including Arizona Senator John McCain and South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham—rallied behind Mr. Mueller, worried that the president’s anxiety over the probe would lead to another sudden firing and saying that Mr. Mueller should be allowed to finish his investigation unimpeded.