“No. No. Next question,” he responded curtly.

His responses, which included multiple references to the dire state of American life and his desire to tackle the problems people face, seemed to reflect public suspicion that the growing Russia investigation could derail his nascent presidency. Instead, Trump suggested it was the FBI’s “special” reputation that had been tarnished the most by the sprawling scandals over the past year.

“I cherish the FBI,” he told reporters. “The FBI has not had that special reputation, with what happen in the campaign, what happened with respect to the Clinton campaign, and even you could say directly or indirectly with respect to the much more successful Trump campaign.”

His sudden firing of Comey last week, Trump argued, was an attempt to restore that reputation. He cited erroneous testimony about Clinton aide Huma Abedin’s handling of classified information that Comey made the week before his ouster, as well as Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s memo castigating Comey’s actions during the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s private email server.

“I actually thought when I made that decision—and I also got a very, very strong recommendation, as you know, from the deputy attorney general, Rod Rosenstein,” Trump asserted. “But when I made that decision, I actually thought it would be bipartisan. People on the Democratic side, not only the Republican side, were saying such terrible things about Director Comey.”

His account differs from the reported sequence of events that unfolded last week. Rosenstein made no such specific recommendations in his memo, although Attorney General Jeff Sessions recommended Comey’s dismissal in a separate letter. And shortly before the press conference began, multiple Democratic senators said Rosenstein told them during a briefing for the entire Senate that he drafted the memo after Trump had decided to fire Comey.

Trump also praised his imminent, unnamed pick to take over the bureau. “We’re going to have a director who is going to be outstanding,” he said. “I will be announcing that director very soon, and I look forward to doing it. I think the people in the FBI will be very, very very, very thrilled.” The president told a group of reporters shortly before the press conference that Joe Lieberman, a former Democratic senator from Connecticut, is among the current frontrunners for the job.

Nominating a new FBI director may draw the immediate crisis for the Trump administration to a close. But the long-term strain of the ongoing Russia investigation will continue to linger as Mueller takes control of the inquiry. Asked about his broader concerns of possible illegality on his part, the president again painted the allegations and suspicions against him as unfounded.

“I think it is totally ridiculous,” Trump said. “Everybody thinks so. Again, we have to get back to working our country properly so that we can take care of the problems that we have. We have plenty of problems.”

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