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US Attorney General Jeff Sessions' allies say the US President Donald Trump is carrying out a deliberate public campaign to pressure him to quit, rather than fire him outright, but the country's top lawyer has no intention of resigning.
Meanwhile, in an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Trump said on Tuesday he was disappointed in Attorney General Jeff Sessions but he declined to say if he would fire him.
Trump is angry that Sessions recused himself from the federal investigation into possible collusion between Trump's election campaign team and Russia. The Kremlin says it did not interfere in the election, and Trump has denied any collusion.
Sessions' recusal means he has no oversight of Special Counsel Robert Mueller, whose wide-ranging investigation has focused on Trump aides and his son-in-law Jared Kushner and cast a deep shadow over Trump's Presidency.
Two people close to Sessions said the attorney general, who was the first Republican senator to back Trump's Presidential campaign, has been deeply offended by the public berating from his boss, but his resolve to stay is strong.
The public attacks by a President on a member of his own Cabinet and one-time close political ally have stunned many in Washington. Trump has torn out yet another page from the rulebook – typically a President would convey his displeasure with a cabinet secretary out of the public eye.
Republican lawmakers sprang to Sessions' defense on Tuesday, and the top Democrat in the Senate, Chuck Schumer, accused Trump of trying to "bully his own attorney general out of office." He said if Trump fired Sessions, Democrats would fight any attempt to replace him during the August congressional recess.
Trump's public criticism of Sessions began in earnest in an interview with the New York Times last week, in which he said that he would not have hired him had he known he would recuse himself from the Russia investigation.
He followed that with the critical tweets, and close aides, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders and newly installed White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci, have gone on television to reinforce Trump's frustration with Sessions.
Adding to the pressure were multiple reports on Monday that Trump was considering Republican Senator Ted Cruz and former New York Mayor Rudi Giuliani as replacements. Cruz called the reports false and Giuliani demurred.
At a news conference last Thursday, Sessions said he loved his job and planned to stay in it "as long as that is appropriate."
A Justice Department official said Sessions started his day on Tuesday with his usual early morning run on the treadmill in the department's gym. Soon afterward, he got down to work.
Trump said then that the move was motivated by his frustration with the Russia investigation, but Comey's firing triggered widespread criticism and led to Mueller's appointment.
Firing Sessions would be an enormously risky move for Trump and would likely be seen by his critics as a move to stop Mueller's investigation into the President's aides. It would spark an uproar among Republicans in Congress.
On Tuesday, Republican senators and congressmen expressed disquiet with Trump's public attacks on Sessions, while others sprang to his defense.
Sessions recused himself in March from the Russia investigation after failing to disclose at his confirmation hearing that he had held meetings in 2016 with Russia's ambassador in Washington.
Sessions' former Republican colleague in the Senate, Thom Tillis, said in a statement that in recusing himself, the attorney general had "demonstrated good judgment by doing so and removed all appearances of a potential conflict.
( This article was published in an arrangement with Reuters.)
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