Hillary Clinton on Saturday questioned
FBI Director James Comey's decision to write to congressional leaders about
emails uncovered in the bureau's probe into Anthony Weiner, saying the timing
of such a move was "unprecedented" and "deeply troubling."
"It's
pretty strange to put something like that out with such little information
right before an election," Clinton told supporters in Daytona Beach,
Florida, where the crowd booed at the mention of Comey's letter. "In fact,
it's not just strange, it's unprecedented and it's deeply troubling because
voters deserve to get full and complete facts."
Clinton
called on Comey to swiftly release more information, saying he must
"explain everything right away, put it all right on the table."
Clinton
also swiped at Republican rival Donald Trump, saying he's "doing his best
to confuse, mislead and discourage the American people" over the issue.
"Of
course, Donald Trump is already making up lies about this," Clinton said.
The
Democratic nominee's comments here marked an escalation in the Clinton
campaign's full-out war against Comey in the final 10 days of the election.
Earlier
in the day, just hours after Comey made the stunning announcement on Friday
that the FBI is examining newly unveiled emails that appear to be
"pertinent" to the now-closed investigation into Clinton's private
server, top campaign officials unleashed a blistering attack on the FBI
director, accusing him of being irresponsibly "light on facts" and
"heavy on innuendo."
On
a conference call with reporters, Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta
accused Comey of failing to be "forthcoming with the facts." Podesta
blasted both the timing and contents of the letter Comey sent to congressional
leaders on Friday, summing the director's actions as "providing selective
information."
Campaign
manager Robby Mook echoed Podesta's call for more information from Comey and
suggested that the FBI has now waded into political territory.
"The
Justice Department's longstanding practice is: Don't do anything seen as trying
to influence an election," Mook said. "It's completely unfair to
Secretary Clinton and it's really unfair to the voters."
'Hillary's not going
to be distracted'
The
sharp criticism marked an extraordinary rebuke of the head of an agency
historically known for its political independence. And it guarantees that Comey
-- already a polarizing presence for his role in probing Clinton's email use as
secretary of state -- will be a central political figure in the election's
final days.
As
Clinton prepared to fly to Florida for a two-day swing through the battleground
state, Podesta was defiant: "We're not going to be distracted and
Hillary's not going to be distracted in the final days of this election over
nothing."
Both
Podesta and Mook emphasized the possibility that the emails that the FBI is now
examining -- uncovered as part of the bureau's investigation into Clinton aide
Huma Abedin's estranged husband, Anthony Weiner -- may not reveal new
information.
"Reports
indicate that many of these emails are likely to be duplicates," Podesta
said. "It's in fact entirely possible all the emails in question are just
that -- duplicates."
Donald
Trump continued to trumpet the news at a campaign stop in Golden, Colorado,
Saturday afternoon, wondering if Clinton would keep Abedin as an adviser.
"Huma's
been a problem," Trump said. "I wonder if Huma's going to stay there.
I hope they haven't given Huma immunity because it seemed that everybody that
walked down the sidewalk got immunity. She knows the real story. She knows
what's going on."
Abedin,
one of Clinton's closest confidantes, regularly travels with Clinton and was
with the candidate on Friday when the FBI news broke. However, Abedin was
notably absent on Saturday as Clinton traveled to Florida.
Comey
was sworn in as FBI director in 2013 for a 10-year term. That means if Clinton
were to win in November, Comey would serve under her administration unless she
chose to remove him.
A
Clinton aide later said Saturday that Clinton took the FBI news "like a
champ." The aide added that Clinton and her top aides were well aware that
the last two weeks of the campaign would not be entirely smooth and that
Clinton's reaction reflected that.
"She
is in a good state of mind," the aide added.
Sudden turn
The
new attacks on Comey are a sudden turn for Clinton's campaign, which sang the
FBI director's praises for his initial findings in the Clinton email case.
Clinton
aides, in conversations with reporters and in statements, highlighted the fact
that Comey was a Republican known for his fierce independence, touting him --
and his investigators -- as career professionals. Surrogates were told to
highlight Comey's testimony to Congress and note his political affiliation and
track record.
In
an interview on CNN's "Situation Room" in July, Clinton press
secretary Brian Fallon went after Republicans for criticizing Comey after the
FBI concluded it would not press criminal charges against Clinton.
"It
seems they were disappointed with the outcome of the FBI investigation so they
decided to put the director in a hot seat and second-guess his decision,"
Fallon said at the time. "I think it is a bad look for House Republicans
to be second-guessing a career prosecutor who is a registered Republican, No. 2
official at the Justice Department under George Bush and was even deputy council
on the committee investigating the Clintons in the 1990s."
On
Sunday, Fallon said the issues that the Clinton campaign is now raising are
different from attempts by Republicans to smear the bureau as
"corrupt" and "engaging in a nonexistent conspiracy."
"We
are taking issue with a decision to publicly surface FBI activities on the eve
of an election, which is an undisputed violation of protocol that both the
current Attorney General and Republicans like George Terwilliger have
acknowledged," Fallon said.
Nevertheless,
the Clinton campaign now finds itself voicing similar concerns as some
Republicans when it comes to the FBI's handling of emails uncovered in its
Weiner investigation.
Former
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, an outspoken Trump supporter, wrote on Twitter
Saturday: "If there are really more than 10,000 emails in the
weiner-Abedin computer the FBI should release all Monday. Americans have a
right to know," he wrote.
Gingrich
added: "We should not be forced to vote with ten thousand or more emails
still hidden by the FBI. John Podesta and Hillary Clinton are right."
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