by Josh Lederman and Mike Memoli
WASHINGTON — It would start within minutes of special counsel Robert
Mueller being fired — a torrent of activity ricocheting through the
halls of Congress and over television airwaves, including nearly a
thousand protests being prepped from the Virgin Islands to Alaska.
Democrats have drafted a wide-ranging contingency plan should Mueller be fired or President Donald Trump take other steps to quash the Russia investigation, like firing Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein or pardoning key witnesses.
Of
top concern in the first 24 hours of such a move would be preventing
Mueller’s documents from being destroyed and his team disbanded,
according to interviews with nearly a dozen lawmakers, congressional
aides, Democratic operatives and attorneys involved in the planning.
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Source: NBC News
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