I asked five legal experts whether they believe Sessions violated his recusal promise by firing McCabe. Some said that he did, while others said they would need more information to decide.
Here are the facts as we know them: McCabe used the FBI press office to authorize a bureau lawyer and spokesperson to speak to the Wall Street Journal for a 2016 story about infighting in the FBI over how to handle investigations into Hillary Clinton, a story that included her use of email as secretary of state and the Clinton Foundation. Specifically, McCabe authorized officials to push back against allegations that he had slowed down an investigation into the Clinton Foundation. As the New York Times notes, the article says that McCabe insisted his agents had the authority to investigate the foundation even if the Justice Department wouldn't authorize grand jury subpoenas.
The inspector general's report on exactly what happened after hasn't been released, but it reportedly determines McCabe lacked candor with internal investigators when asked about disclosures to the Wall Street Journal. The question about Sessions now is whether the Clinton Foundation tie-in is enough to have forced the attorney general to recuse himself from dealing with the McCabe affair.
Kathleen Clark, a law professor at Washington University and an expert in ethics, said in an email that she agrees with Goodman's analysis that Sessions did break his recusal promise. "Sessions promised to recuse from 'any matters involving the Clinton Foundation,' yet he failed to recuse from the decision of how (if at all) McCabe should be disciplined in connection with the Justice Department's investigation of the Clinton Foundation," she said.
David Sklansky, a Stanford law professor, concurred — Sessions himself has publicly recognized he can't be impartial when it comes to Clinton-related matters, which presumably includes the McCabe firing, he said.
"If the basis for firing McCabe has anything to do with actions he took in connection with investigations of either the Clinton Foundation or Secretary Clinton's email server, then the participation of Attorney General Sessions in the decision does appear to break the promise he made to Congress during his confirmation hearings," he said in an email. "He promised to recuse himself from any participation in these investigations, because — as even Sessions recognized — there was serious reason to doubt he could be impartial, given the active role he had played in the Trump campaign. And recusal means recusal: it means he has to take himself completely out of the chain of decision."
Carl Tobias, a law professor at the University of Richmond, said the Senate should act. "If Sessions violated the recusal promise, the [Senate Judiciary Committee] would have to agree to act on that, but the panel may split along party lines," he said in an email.
Michael Horowitz, the Justice Department's inspector general, provided a report to the Department of Justice determining that McCabe made an "unauthorized disclosure to the news media and lacked candor," according to Sessions's statement on the decision to fire McCabe, but the report hasn't been made public yet, making it hard to determine the merits of Sessions's decision. If the decision was made based not on the Clinton Foundation investigation but instead relates solely to McCabe's conduct in making misleading comments regarding that investigation, then the argument could be made that Sessions didn't violate his recusal after all.
"That would help, so we could see the reasoning behind the firing to see if it is persuasive," Tobias said. Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), the ranking member on the House Intelligence Committee, made a similar observation on Twitter.
McCabe's firing could be viewed as an "internal disciplinary matter" given the inspector general's findings and the recommendation from the FBI's Office of Professional Responsibility that he be fired, said Jonathan Turley, a law professor at George Washington University. But Sessions could have stepped aside just in case. "A solid argument could have been made to defer to [Deputy Attorney General] Rod Rosenstein given McCabe's role on the Russia investigation," Turley wrote. "However, there is a good-faith basis for acting on the question."
It is also worth noting that while Sessions said he would recuse himself from anything related to the Clinton Foundation in his exchange with Grassley, his official recusal statement only mentions the 2016 campaign. "There is a difference in what Mr. Sessions said he would do when testifying before Congress and his official recusal letter," Andrea Curcio, a law professor at Georgia State University, told me.
There is plenty that is legally questionable about the decision to fire Sessions, however: Trump's sustained attack on McCabe, including on Saturday, and the rushed manner in which the Department of Justice fired McCabe in order to strip him of his pension bring Sessions's motivations into question.
Curcio, an evidence professor and former litigator, said the timing of McCabe's firing — just two days before his pension vests — could create a showdown if the matter ends up in court. "[It] sets up a great cross-examination if McCabe's testimony is unfavorable to the Trump administration," she said. "The loss of his pension as a motivating factor for any unfavorable testimony now becomes fertile ground for a withering cross-examination."