Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein appeared before Congress today to defend the impartiality of special prosecutor Robert Mueller and his investigation into the Trump campaign's ties with Russia.
"If there were good cause, I would act. If there were no good cause, I would not,"
Rosenstein said
Homeland security expert and Zemcar CEO Juliette Kayyem said Rosenstein's defense sends a message to the White House not to interfere with Mueller's investigation.
"I would say the deputy attorney general has missed no opportunity to make it clear to the Trump White House, which is probably listening along, that he has high confidence in Robert Mueller and his team," Kayyem said.
Rosenstein's defense comes at a time when some Republicans have accused Mueller and his investigation of bias. The accusations center around
recently released text messages
Kayyem believes that Rosenstein's testimony was a rebuff to those accusations.
"I think Rod [Rosenstein], the deputy attorney general, used this opportunity to say, 'Whatever's going on politically, you're going to have to go through me,'" Kayyem said.
"He is basically setting up a Saturday Night Massacre-type scenario for the White House," she continued.
The
Saturday Night Massacre
Click the audio player above to hear more from Juliette Kayyem.