WASHINGTON -- President Donald Trump will not assert executive privilege to block fired FBI director James Comey from testifying on Capitol Hill, the White House said Monday, setting the stage for a public airing of the former top law-enforcement official's dealings with the commander in chief.
White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the president's power to invoke executive privilege is "well-established." But she said Trump wanted to allow for a "swift and thorough examination of the facts" related to Comey's ouster and the investigations into his campaign's possible ties to Russia.
Comey is scheduled to testify Thursday before the Senate intelligence committee. His appearance will mark his first public comments since he was abruptly fired by the president May 9.
White House officials had weighed trying to block Comey by arguing his discussions with the president pertained to national security, and there was an expectation of privacy.
Officials ultimately concluded the optics of taking that step would be worse than the risk of letting the former FBI director testify freely, however.
Legal experts also have said the president likely undermined his ability to assert executive privilege by discussing his dealings with Comey publicly in tweets and interviews.
Lawmakers in both parties have urged Trump to allow Comey to testify publicly.
On Sunday, Sen. Roy Blunt, a Missouri Republican and a member of the intelligence committee, said the president would be "better served by getting all this information out."
"Sooner rather than later, let's find out what happened and bring this to a conclusion," Blunt said on "Fox News Sunday." ''You don't do that, I think, by invoking executive privilege on a conversation you had apparently with nobody else in the room."
Comey associates have alleged Trump asked the FBI director whether he could drop an investigation into former national-security adviser Michael Flynn and his Russian contacts.
Flynn was fired after less than a month because of revelations he misled Vice President Mike Pence about his communications with Russia's ambassador.
Comey is also likely to be asked by lawmakers about Trump's assertion that the former FBI chief told him three times that he was not under investigation as part of the federal probe into his campaign's possible Russia ties. He later tweeted that Comey better hope there are no "tapes" of their conversations.
The White House has rebuffed questions about whether Trump was suggesting he had recorded his discussions with the former FBI chief.
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