FBI Director James Comey sought to publish an op-ed as early as last summer about Russian efforts to influence the 2016 presidential election, but was barred from doing so by the Obama White House, Newsweek reported Wednesday. In a White House meeting in June or July, Comey reportedly brought with him a draft of the proposed op-ed and presented it to top administration officials, including former Secretary of State John Kerry and former Attorney General Loretta Lynch. “He had a draft of it or an outline,” a source with knowledge of the meeting told Newsweek. “He held up a piece of paper in a meeting and said, ‘I want to go forward, what do people think of this?'”
White House officials at the time ultimately rejected the idea, deciding instead that any effort to make information about Russian election meddling public should be coordinated between multiple federal agencies, according to the report. “An op-ed doesn’t have the same stature, it comes from one person,” the source said.
A second source told Newsweek that the op-ed would have included some of the same information as an intelligence report made public on Jan. 6 alleging that Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered an extensive campaign to interfere in and influence the U.S. election in President Trump’s favor.
Comey, the source said, most likely would have sought to publish the piece in The New York Times.
Full Article: FBI Director Comey sought to reveal Russian election meddling last summer: report | TheHill.