It’s been D.C. shorthand for many years: when a president publicly expresses confidence in an official in his employ, that official probably isn’t at risk of losing his or her job. When a White House hedges on a president’s confidence in administration officials, they should probably give their resumes an update.
With this in mind, FBI Director Chris Wray has new reason to be concerned about his job security.
President Trump on Monday declined to say he has confidence in Christopher Wray and stressed that he disagrees with the FBI director, who has said he does not believe there was spying on the president’s 2016 campaign.
“Well, we’ll see how it turns out,” Trump said in an exclusive interview with The Hill when asked about his level of confidence in Wray.
It’s a striking comment from a sitting president referring to his own handpicked FBI director, but it’s also not surprising.
Last fall, NBC News reported that Donald Trump has been known to privately complain about his FBI chief, arguing behind the scenes that Chris Wray was “not protecting his interests.” As regular readers know, the president’s dissatisfaction has become far more overt of late.









