Never before has the deputy director of the FBI been fired. Late Friday night, the Trump administration broke new ground.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions late Friday night accepted the recommendation that former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, who took the reins of the agency during the turbulent days after the abrupt firing of James Comey, be terminated — two days before he was to retire and become eligible for full pension benefits.
Though McCabe — who has been attacked by President Donald Trump — stepped down as deputy director in late January, he remained on the federal payroll, planning to retire on Sunday. The firing places his federal pension in jeopardy.
The official rationale is that the Justice Department’s inspector general identified wrongdoing on McCabe’s part as part of the FBI’s investigation into Hillary Clinton’s emails.
And while it’s entirely possible McCabe took steps he shouldn’t have — the full report has not yet been made available to the public — it’s difficult to take the official line seriously after seeing Donald Trump’s taunting end-zone dance over the weekend. The president’s critics responded to McCabe’s firing by arguing that the move appeared to be part of a politically motivated vendetta orchestrated by the Oval Office — and Trump took steps to prove his critics right.
The president celebrated McCabe’s firing as “a great day for democracy,” adding, “Sanctimonious James Comey was his boss and made McCabe look like a choirboy. He knew all about the lies and corruption going on at the highest levels of the FBI!” Trump also published a tweet with some demonstrably false Clinton-related conspiracy theories, insisting that McCabe was “caught, called out and fired.”
The FBI’s Office of Professional Responsibility may have proposed the termination, but the president himself seemed to have no use for the fig leaf. Indeed, he never has: Trump has targeted McCabe personally for months. Friday night was simply the culmination of a petty and corrupt vendetta.
There’s no shortage of angles to this story, but as the dust starts to settle, here are a few things to keep in mind:
1. Attorney General Jeff Sessions keeps looking for ways to make the White House happy. Firing McCabe two days before his retirement seems to be part of a larger pattern in which the Alabama Republican prioritizes the president’s wishes.









