"A president can run the country," President Donald Trump said. "And that's what happened, George. I run the country." | Evan Vucci/AP Photo White House Trump: ‘I run the country’

President Donald Trump stood firm in his belief that former special counsel Robert Mueller absolved him of any crimes, adding that he had every right to fire Mueller if he wanted to.

Speaking with ABC News' George Stephanopoulos in an interview segment broadcast Sunday morning, Trump dove into the Mueller investigation into the 2016 election, justifying his decision not to speak with the special counsel's team.


While denying he ever had any such plans, the president also argued that firing Mueller would not have amounted to obstruction. Former White House Counsel Don McGahn has testified that Trump wanted to fire Mueller, which Trump disputed during the interview.

"A president can't obstruct justice?" Stephanopoulos asked.

"A president can run the country," Trump responded. "And that's what happened, George. I run the country."

Reflecting the famous 1977 interviews between David Frost and former President Richard Nixon, Stephanopoulos asked the president "When the president does it, it's not illegal?"

Trump replied that Article II is "very strong. Read it."

Stephanopoulos also asked about the Trump team's decision not to testify in person to the special counsel, opting instead to submit written responses. Stephanopoulos noted that the president was answering questions covering similar topics as the investigation on national TV. Trump went after Mueller as being partisan and unfair.

"Because they were looking to get us for lies, for slight misstatements," Trump said of the Mueller investigation. "I looked at what happened to people, and it was very unfair. Very, very unfair. Very unfair."

Segments of the interviews have already been released ahead of its full broadcast Sunday evening. In a segment released Wednesday, Trump shook Washington by saying he would likely take foreign assistance if offered ahead of the 2020 elections and that he may not report it to the FBI. Those remarks were widely condemned across the political spectrum for opening up to foreign interference in a U.S. election.

Trump reiterated to Stephanopoulos his frequent claim that there was no collusion with Russia, heating up as he kept bringing up the topic with the ABC News anchor.

"Look, George, you're being a little wise guy, OK, which is, you know, typical for you. Just so you understand. Very simple. It's very simple," Trump said. "There was no crime."

Though Mueller did not bring up charges against Trump for obstructing justice, he did not absolve the president either, saying that if "we had had confidence the president clearly did not commit a crime we would have said so." But Trump was confident he would not be prosecuted after leaving office.

"I did nothing wrong," Trump said.

