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    Ex-FBI agent who played key role in Russia inquiry to release book

    The former FBI counterintelligence agent Peter Strzok, who played a key role in the Russia investigation but whose text messages about Donald Trump made him a target of the president’s wrath, is releasing a book.Compromised: Counterintelligence and the Threat of Donald J Trump is due out on 8 September, publisher Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Books & Media said.The book promises an insider’s view on some of the most sensational and politically freighted investigations in modern US history, including into whether the 2016 Trump campaign coordinated with Russia to sway the presidential election.Due out two months before the November election, the book adds to the list of first-person accounts from other senior FBI and justice department officials.The former FBI director James Comey and former deputy director Andrew McCabe have each released books that describe aspects of the Trump investigation. Andrew Weissmann, a former justice department prosecutor who served on Mueller’s team, is due out with a book in September.Other books about Trump and his administration, most recently by the former national security adviser John Bolton and the president’s niece, Mary Trump, have become instant bestsellers. HR McMaster, Bolton’s predecessor, also has a book due out in September, as does Michael Cohen, Trump’s former personal lawyer and fixer.“Russia has long regarded the US as its ‘Main Enemy’ and I spent decades trying to protect our country from their efforts to weaken and undermine us,“ Strzok said in a statement.“In this book, I use that background to explain how the elevation by President Trump and his collaborators of Trump’s own personal interests over the interests of the country allowed Putin to succeed beyond Stalin’s wildest dreams, and how the national security implications of Putin’s triumph will persist through our next election and beyond.”Strzok helped lead the investigation into whether the Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton mishandled classified information on the private email server she relied on as secretary of state. The FBI ultimately recommended against criminal charges.Strzok also played a pivotal role in the Russia investigation, including interviewing the former national security adviser Michael Flynn about his contacts with the Russian ambassador during the presidential transition.Strzok briefly served on special counsel Robert Mueller’s team but was removed after the justice department inspector general flagged derogatory text messages about Trump Strzok sent and received in 2016.Strzok became a regular target of the president’s attacks, Trump alleging that Strzok and others plotted against his campaign and even committed treason – an accusation Strzok’s lawyer rejected as “beyond reckless”.The texts were exchanged with an FBI lawyer, Lisa Page, and Trump routinely refers to the two of them as “the lovers”.At a congressional hearing in July 2018, Strzok insisted he never allowed personal viewpoints to influence his work, though he did acknowledge being dismayed by Trump’s behavior.The justice department inspector general said it did not find evidence that Strzok and other FBI officials were motivated by political bias.Strzok was fired in August 2018 and has sued in return. In a statement announcing the book, the publishing company said “the Trump administration used his private expression of political opinions to force him out”.“But by that time,” the statement added, “Strzok had seen more than enough to convince him that the commander in chief had fallen under the sway of America’s adversary in the Kremlin.”Though Mueller did not allege a criminal conspiracy between Moscow and the Trump campaign, the publisher said Strzok “grapples with a question that should concern every US citizen: when a president appears to favor personal and Russian interests over those of our nation, has he become a national security threat?” More

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    Too Much and Never Enough review: Mary Trump thumps Donald

    Mary Trump’s tell-all will not make her uncle’s re-election bid any easier. The president’s late-night walk of shame is already a classic campaign moment. His niece’s allegation that he paid someone else to take his college entrance exams resonates as true, because of his reported disdain for reading and capacity to inadvertently invent new words like “swiffian”.Adding insult to injury, Maryanne Trump Barry, Trump’s sister, appears to be the key source for this smorgasbord of dysfunction. She is a retired federal judge who left the bench with an ethics cloud over her head. Fittingly, as Mary Trump lacerates multiple sets of vital organs, her pen a stiletto, she thanks her aunt “for all of the enlightening information”.It is score-settling time, Trump-style. Go big or go home. Few are spared.Too Much and Never Enough doubles as mesmerizing beach reading and a memorable opposition research dump, in time for the party conventions. Think John Bolton-quality revelations, but about Trump’s family. It is the book Michael Wolff, the author of Fire and Fury, likely wishes he had written but isn’t kin so he couldn’t. It is salacious, venomous and well-sourced.Sadly, it is also a book born of tragedy and pain. The author’s father, Fred Trump Jr, died in his early 40s. He drank hard, was jettisoned by his father and siblings, and treated as a cautionary tale. Mary Trump is angry, not self-pitying. Although she casts her book as a warning to the American public, it is 200-plus pages of revenge served with the benefit of time and distance. Yet the narrative remains compelling.Fred Jr found joy in flying and serving his country. He was a member of the national guard and a TWA pilot. In most homes, that would be deemed an achievement. But the Trumps were not most folks. Fred Sr saw his oldest son as weak. His brother Donald humiliated him, his mother Mary stood by and watched. As for Fred Jr’s military service, Trump père found little value there. As for Donald, “bone spurs” were his path to avoid Vietnam.When Fred Jr was dying, in 1981, the future president thought it an opportune time to go to the movies. Past became prelude. When Roy Cohn, Trump’s friend and consigliere, was dying of Aids a decade later, Trump walked away again. A stunned Cohn reportedly remarked: “Donald pisses ice water.”But it was the aftermath of Fred Sr’s death that put Mary Trump and the older generation on a collision course. Fred Jr’s two children were cut out of Fred Sr’s will. Maryanne and her brothers did their best to thwart their claims to an inheritance.Tensions spiraled, then subsided. The matter was settled, and the parties filed a stipulation in surrogate’s court. Ostensibly, the agreement barred disclosure regarding Fred Sr and his legacy. Maryanne was an executor of the estate. Ironically, she has emerged as her niece’s muse. The judge leaked like a sieve.According to Too Much and Never Enough, Trump and Cohn played a pivotal role in Maryanne’s elevation to the federal bench. At the time, she was only an assistant federal prosecutor, an usual launchpad to a federal judgeship. Strings were pulled. When Maryanne had the temerity to tell Trump his presidency was failing, her niece now writes, he reminded her that he made her. Like Fred Sr, Trump brooks no hint of disloyalty.A New York Times investigation in the origins of Trump’s wealth brought the past roaring back. Questions surrounding the family fortune abounded. Tax evasion appears as one possibility. After resisting overtures for assistance from Susanne Craig of the Times, Mary Trump began to cooperate. In the process, she came to doubt the rationale for her own settlement.As for Aunt Maryanne’s role in the mess, Mary Trump lumps her in with the rest of them: “They all knew where the bodies were buried because they buried them together.”This may be the first time a family member of a sitting president has publicly accused him of paying a surrogate to take the SATs – a claim the alleged surrogate’s widow denies. Looking back, Trump’s obsession with Barack Obama’s college transcripts appears to have been a fusion of envy, projection and racism. As an institution of learning, Trump University was truly created in its namesake’s image.Amid all this, mockery is unavoidable. And as Mary Trump observes, the president hates to be mocked. Think of Stormy Daniels dishing about Toad and Mario-Kart – an image best forgotten. More

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    Melania Trump's former aide to release 'explosive' memoir – report

    A former senior aide to Melania Trump who helped oversee Donald Trump’s inauguration has written an “explosive” memoir detailing her 15-year friendship with the first lady, according to reports. Stephanie Winston Wolkoff was appointed as an unpaid adviser to the first lady shortly after Donald Trump won the 2016 election, and she played a high-profile […] More

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    Our Time Is Now review: Stacey Abrams for attorney general, if not VP to Biden

    If intelligence, thoughtfulness, an encyclopedic knowledge of voter suppression techniques and an elegant writing style were the main qualifications for the vice-presidency, Stacey Abrams would be odds-on-favorite to be Joe Biden’s running mate. Abrams is already a proven vote getter. When she became the first major party black woman nominee for governor in Georgia, in […] More

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    The Room Where It Happened by John Bolton review – a monument to his own grandiosity

    The inevitable fallout between the president and his national security adviser makes for a punchy but self-aggrandising memoir ‘Bad cop and worse cop’: Donald Trump and John Bolton in the White House, May 2018. Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images Any hairdresser could have told them it wouldn’t work. Trump initially refused to hire John Bolton because […] More

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    Masha Gessen: 'I never thought I'd say it, but Trump is worse than Putin'

    Interview Lisa O’Kelly Four years ago, the author predicted that Trump would transform the US into an autocracy. Now, Gessen believes the country is in a revolutionary moment Read an extract from Masha Gessen’s Surviving Autocracy ‘They both have this contempt for excellence, they both have a hatred of government’: Presidents Trump and Putin at […] More

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    Trump adviser Navarro blasts John Bolton's 'silly' China claim

    John Bolton Judge allows publication of tell-all but slams author’s behaviour Aide: ‘That guy should turn in his seersucker suit for a jumpsuit’ The Room Where It Happened: a broadside to sink Trump? John Bolton – wearing a seersucker suit – waits in the Oval Office in July 2019. Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA White House […] More