President Donald Trump said Saturday he would act quickly to appoint a new FBI director following his controversial dismissal earlier this week of James Comey — a move that was still reverberating around Washington.
Trump's administration — embroiled in a deepening crisis over the sacking and its shifting explanation of events — will interview the first four candidates for the post on Saturday, US media reported.
"We can make a fast decision," Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One before flying to southern Virginia, where he is set to deliver a commencement address at Liberty University, an evangelical Christian school.
The White House has provided no set timeline for the process of replacing Comey.
Asked if the decision or an announcement could take place before he leaves for Saudi Arabia on Friday, Trump said: "Even that is possible."
He described the candidates being considered for the post as "outstanding people," "very well-known," and of the "highest level."
On Saturday, Attorney General Jeff Sessions and his deputy Rod Rosenstein will interview acting FBI director Andrew McCabe, Texas Senator John Cornyn, former federal prosecutor Michael Garcia and former assistant attorney general Alice Fisher, The New York Times reported, citing a source familiar with the meetings.
They are among a dozen candidates being considered for the job.
The choice of a new FBI director seen as independent from the White House will be closely scrutinized as Trump faces an avalanche of criticism for firing Comey, the man in charge of a criminal probe into his campaign's possible ties to Russia.
The 49-year-old McCabe, a career FBI agent, has taken part in a number of high-profile investigations, including probes into the Boston Marathon bombing in 2013 and the attacks against US installations in Benghazi, Libya in 2012.
McCabe contradicted Trump this week, telling lawmakers that Comey enjoyed widespread support among the FBI's rank and file, and that the probe into alleged Russian meddling in the election was a "highly significant investigation."
Cornyn, the number two Republican in the Senate, served as Texas attorney general before his election to the Senate in 2002.
Garcia served as assistant secretary for Immigration and Customs Enforcement and US attorney under former president George W. Bush.
Fisher headed the Justice Department's criminal division, also under Bush.
Other candidates include former New York police commissioner Raymond Kelly, former Republican senator Kelly Ayotte, and South Carolina Congressman Trey Gowdy, a former federal prosecutor who headed the Benghazi investigation in the House.
Trump's nominee must be confirmed in the Senate, where Democrats and some Republicans have fiercely criticized Comey's firing.
The president is reported to have asked Comey whether he could be loyal to him during a dinner meeting in February shortly after his inauguration.
Comey promised only that he could be honest, The New York Times reported.
Trump denied that account in a Fox News interview on Friday.
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