New White House chief of staff John
Kelly recently called Attorney General Jeff Sessions to assure him his
job was safe, Fox News has learned from a senior White House official
and another source within the Trump administration.
Kelly called Sessions on Saturday
to emphasize that the White House supported him and wanted him to
continue leading the U.S. Department of Justice, the sources said.
The assurance comes despite tweets and comments about
Sessions from President Donald Trump that came after the attorney
general recused himself from the Russia collusion investigation.
Meanwhile, two members of the U.S. Senate Judiciary
Committee are readying legislation intended to help special counsel
Robert Mueller – who is leading the Russia collusion probe – keep his
job as well.
Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., and Sen. Chris Coons,
D-Del., plan to introduce the legislation Thursday. It would allow any
special counsel for the Justice Department challenge his or her removal
in court, with a review by a three-judge panel within 14 days of the
challenge.
The bill would be retroactive to May 17 -- the day
Mueller was appointed by deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to
investigate Russian meddling in the 2016 election and possible ties to
Donald Trump’s campaign.
“It is critical that special counsels have the
independence and resources they need to lead investigations,” Tillis
said in a statement. “A back-end judicial review process to prevent
unmerited removals of special counsels not only helps to ensure their
investigatory independence, but also reaffirms our nation’s system of
check and balances.”
Mueller was appointed as special counsel in May following Trump’s firing of FBI Director James Comey.
Mueller, who was Comey’s predecessor as FBI director,
has assembled a team of prosecutors and lawyers with experience in
financial fraud, national security and organized crimes to investigate
contacts between Moscow and the Trump campaign.
Trump has been critical of Mueller since his
appointment, and his legal team is looking into potential conflicts
surrounding the team Mueller has hired, including the backgrounds of
members and political contributions by some members to Hillary Clinton.
He has also publicly warned Mueller that he would be out of bounds if he
dug into the Trump family’s finances.
Mueller has strong support on Capitol Hill. Senators
in both parties have expressed concern that Trump may try to fire
Mueller and have warned him not to do so.
“Ensuring that the special counsel cannot be removed improperly is critical to the integrity of his investigation,” Coons said.
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., another member of the
Judiciary panel, said last week that he was working on a similar bill
that would prevent the firing of a special counsel without judicial
review. Graham said then that firing Mueller “would precipitate a
firestorm that would be unprecedented in proportions.”
The Tillis and Coons bill would allow review after
the special counsel had been dismissed. If the panel found there was no
good cause for the counsel’s removal, the person would be immediately
reinstated. The legislation would also codify existing Justice
Department regulations that a special counsel can only be removed for
misconduct, dereliction of duty, incapacity, conflict of interest or
other good cause, such as a violation of departmental policies.
In addition, only the attorney general or the most
senior Justice Department official in charge of the matter could fire
the special counsel.
In the case of the current investigation, Rosenstein
is charged with Mueller's fate because Sessions recused himself from all
matters having to do with the Trump-Russia investigation.
Fox News’ Serafin Gomez and the Associated Press contributed reporting to this story.