[US Attorney-General Jeff Sessions has removed himself from an
investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election,
following revelations he twice met with the Russian ambassador and did
not say so when pressed by Congress.
...
"I have not met with any Russians at any time to discuss any political
campaign and those remarks are unbelievable to me and are false," Mr
Sessions said earlier.
...
"Jeff Sessions is an honest man. He did not say anything wrong," Mr
Trump said in a statement.]

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-03-03/sessions-denies-meeting-with-any-russians-during-campaign/8320826

Jeff Sessions: US Attorney-General steps aside from Russia investigation
Updated about 3 hours ago

[VIDEO: Jeff Sessions steps aside from Russia election interference
investigation (ABC News)]

US Attorney-General Jeff Sessions has removed himself from an
investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election,
following revelations he twice met with the Russian ambassador and did
not say so when pressed by Congress.

Key points:
Deputy Attorney-General Dana Boente will handle matters related to the campaign
President Trump maintains he has "total" confidence in Sessions
Democrats push for Sessions to resign as Attorney-General

The move comes after a growing number of Republicans joined Democratic
leaders in calling for Mr Sessions to step aside.

"I have recused myself in the matters that deal with the Trump
campaign," Mr Sessions told reporters at a hastily arranged news
conference.

Mr Sessions rejected any suggestion that he tried to mislead anyone
about his contacts with Russia, saying: "That is not my intent. That
is not correct".

The Attorney-General said he made the decision to remove himself from
the investigation after his staff recommended that he step aside from
any probe related to the Trump campaign, since he had been involved in
that campaign.

Will Sessions survive?


Here are the people who could determine the fate of Trump's Attorney-General.
Mr Sessions said Deputy Attorney-General Dana Boente would handle such matters.

However, Mr Sessions added that his announcement "should not be
interpreted as confirmation of the existence of any investigation".

Earlier, Mr Sessions had denied meeting Russia's US ambassador, Sergey
Kislyak, during the presidential campaign, despite the Justice
Department saying two meetings took place.

"I have not met with any Russians at any time to discuss any political
campaign and those remarks are unbelievable to me and are false," Mr
Sessions said earlier.

Democrats conducting 'witch hunt': Trump

Following Mr Sessions news conference, President Donald Trump said his
Attorney-General could have been more accurate in what he said about
his contacts with Russian officials, but pointed the finger blame at
the Democrats for blowing up the controversy for political reasons.

"Jeff Sessions is an honest man. He did not say anything wrong," Mr
Trump said in a statement.

"He could have stated his response more accurately, but it was clearly
not intentional.
"The Democrats are overplaying their hand ... it is a total witch hunt!"

'Best for the country to recuse himself'

Since news broke of Mr Sessions' contact with Russia during the 2016
presidential campaign, congressmen had been pushing for Mr Sessions to
recuse himself from the Department of Justice's (DOJ) investigations
into Russia.

Republican Jason Chaffetz, chairman of the House of Representatives
Oversight Committee, had maintained that Mr Sessions "should clarify
his testimony and recuse himself".

 Jason Chaffetz ✔ @jasoninthehouse
AG Sessions should clarify his testimony and recuse himself
6:44 PM - 2 Mar 2017
  4,124 4,124 Retweets   8,959 8,959 likes

Republican senator Rob Portman echoed that, saying: "I think it would
be best for him and for the country to recuse himself from the DOJ
[Department of Justice] Russia probe".

However, Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan said he saw no purpose in
Mr Sessions recusing himself unless the Attorney-General himself was
the subject of an investigation.

Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov told
reporters he did not know anything about the meetings last year
between ambassador Sergei Kislyak and Mr Sessions.

Mr Peskov argued it was normal for an ambassador to meet with
officials and politicians, adding that "the more such meetings an
ambassador has, the more efficient his work is".

He described the reaction to the news of Mr Sessions' meetings as "an
emotional atmosphere leading to resistance to the idea of any
US-Russia dialogue".

"The negative effect for the idea to develop at least some dialogue
with Russia is evident," Mr Peskov added.

Democrats demand resignation of Sessions

Top Democrats in Congress demanded the resignation of Mr Sessions, who
was a close adviser to Mr Trump during his 2016 election campaign, and
the appointment of an independent, impartial special prosecutor with
no attachment to the Trump administration to examine the Russian role
in the election.

House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi accused Mr Sessions of lying
under oath during his Senate confirmation hearing.

"The law has been broken," she told reporters.

 Nancy Pelosi ✔ @NancyPelosi
We are far past recusal. Jeff #Sessions lied under oath. Anything less
than resignation or removal from office is unacceptable.
7:22 PM - 2 Mar 2017
  14,602 14,602 Retweets   30,925 30,925 likes

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said Mr Sessions had misled
Congress over his contacts with the ambassador and should resign for
the good of the country, adding it would be like "Alice in Wonderland"
if the administration was to approve Mr Sessions' investigating
himself.

Mr Sessions, a former US senator, received Mr Kislyak in his office in
September, the Washington Post reported.

The other encounter was in July at a Heritage Foundation event that
was attended by about 50 ambassadors, during the Republican National
Convention, the report said.

The Justice Department confirmed the two meetings, saying they were in
Mr Sessions' capacity as a member of the Senate Armed Services
Committee and there was nothing untoward about them.

During his confirmation hearing in January, Mr Sessions responded to a
question from Democratic senator Al Franken that he did not "have
communications with the Russians" during the course of the
presidential campaign.

Why did Trump pick Jeff Sessions?


The firebrand from Alabama was one of the main men in President
Trump's White House.
Allegations over contacts between Mr Trump's aides and Russia before
his inauguration on January 20, and the charge of Russian election
interference that the Kremlin has denied, have swirled around since
the early days of Mr Trump's presidency.

Mr Trump has accused officials in former Democratic President Barack
Obama's administration of trying to discredit him.

US intelligence agencies concluded last year that Russia hacked and
leaked Democratic emails during the election campaign as part of an
effort to tilt the vote in Mr Trump's favour.

As Attorney-General, Mr Sessions heads the Justice Department. The
FBI, part of the department, has been leading investigations into the
allegations of the Russian meddling and any links to Mr Trump's
associates.

ABC/wires

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