Kellyanne Conway’s husband defends Mueller probe, criticizes Trump

FAN Editor

George Conway, lawyer and husband of White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, just wrote a forceful defense of special counsel Robert Mueller‘s Russia investigation. It’s the latest in a series of less-than-subtle digs the conservative has taken against President Donald Trump.

The critique came as a rebuttal of a Wall Street Journal op-ed written by conservative scholar Steven Calabresi, disputing the special counsel’s constitutionality. It is not the first time Conway has taken issue with his wife’s boss.

But he’s rarely been this direct.

The roughly 3,400-word article published Monday on the respected Lawfare blog was largely a rebuke to Calabresi, who argued in his May 13 op-ed that the special counsel had exceeded the constitutional limits established in a 1988 Supreme Court case.

In his opening salvo, Conway said Calabresi’s op-ed may have influenced Trump’s thinking on the legal validity of the probe when he tweeted “the appointment of the Special Counsel is totally UNCONSTITUTIONAL!” in early June.

Conway saved some of his most direct opprobrium for Trump himself.

“It isn’t very surprising to see the president tweet a meritless legal position,” Conway concluded, “because, as a non-lawyer, he wouldn’t know the difference between a good one and a bad one.”

Conway argued that the Mueller investigation has not exceeded its authority under the Appointments Clause of the constitution, and challenged Calabresi’s assertion that the special counsel is acting like a “principal officer,” which Calabresi said would violate the Supreme Court’s precedent.

In a yet-to-be-published response defending his stance on Mueller, Calabresi said Conway “mangles” his argument and “fails to confront the overwhelming evidence that the Mueller appointment is unconstitutional.”

The White House did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

Kellyanne Conway has swatted away questions about her husband’s criticism of the president she directly serves, saying in a CNN interview in April that asking about his social media use is “meant to harass and embarrass.”

Free America Network Articles

Leave a Reply

Next Post

Apple and two other Dow stocks could propel the blue chips to new highs

The Dow Jones industrial average is just 5 percent from its all-time highs, and one technician has three names that could take the index back to its old records and onto new highs. To Chris Verrone, head of technical analysis at Strategas Research Partners, the clear Dow winners will be […]

You May Like