The ceremony in a courtyard at FBI headquarters yesterday was largely a formality since Wray has been on the job for about two months. But in a reflection of the unusual circumstances of the event, it took place without Trump.
And Wray's two direct predecessors as FBI director, James Comey and Robert Mueller, were also absent, avoiding potentially uncomfortable encounters amid an investigation that touches the White House.
Trump fired Comey in May, and Mueller was appointed as special counsel the following week to oversee an FBI investigation into potential coordination between the Trump campaign and Russia to influence the outcome of the 2016 presidential election. Part of that probe includes an investigation into Comey's firing.
Neither the Russia investigation nor a separate FBI probe of Hillary Clinton's email use was directly referenced during the 45-minute ceremony. Yet the politics of the event were unmistakable, at both the podium and in the audience, which included Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who wrote the memo that the White House initially held up as justification for Comey's firing.
"Our mission is simple but profound to protect the American people and uphold the Constitution. That mission hasn't changed, and it won't change not as long as I have anything to say about it," Wray said.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who recused himself from the Russia investigation in March and was later involved in Trump's decision to fire Comey, praised Wray as "brilliant, hard-working and an American patriot." His prepared remarks, though not mentioning Comey by name, included comments that could be seen as indirect jibes at him and his handling of the Clinton email case, with Sessions at one point saying, "A director must know it is not about him, but about security, justice and law."
FBI directors are appointed to 10-year terms to protect them from political influence. Mueller, who was appointed days before the Sept 11 attacks, wound up serving for 12 years. Comey was fired in his fourth year.
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