Comey faces complicated path under Trump administration
WASHINGTON — FBI Director James Comey faces a complicated path under a Donald Trump administration. Does he try to serve out the remaining seven years of his term under a president who has publicly questioned the FBI’s integrity? Or does he stay on as a safeguard against executive power and a guide for a novice president on complex national security matters?
The term of the FBI director is set at 10 years as an affirmation of the bureau’s political independence, and some other chiefs, including Robert Mueller, Comey’s predecessor, have served presidents of both parties.
But Comey would be in the delicate position of working with a president who lobbed occasional criticisms from the campaign trail against the nation’s premier law enforcement agency. Though attention had centred on whether Comey could have co-existed with a Hillary Clinton presidency, given the FBI’s investigation into her email practices and his own public statements about the probe, that question applies at least equally to a Trump administration.
As recently as Sunday, Trump complained that Clinton was “protected by a rigged system” after Comey renewed his decision not to recommend charges for her use of a private email server while secretary of state. Trump repeated his assertion that Clinton was “guilty” and that the FBI “knows it,” the bureau’s own public statement notwithstanding. Earlier, Trump appeared disrespectful of the Justice Department’s independent decision-making power when he said he’d ask his attorney general to name a special prosecutor to take another look at Clinton. That stance went hand-in-hand with “lock her up” chants from some supporters.

