A federal judge has rejected the administration's request to ban the publication of the president's former national security adviser book • Trump could still appeal to Supreme Court
Former National Security Adviser John Bolton and President Trump // Photo: Reuters
A federal judge on Saturday rejected the administration's request to halt the publication of the battle for National Security Attorney John Bolton's book in which the senior counsel describes the administration's conduct during his tenure.
The judge, Royce Lambert, wrote a ten-page document in which he stated that the administration's arguments were not enough to stop the publication of the book. "For obvious reasons, the House of Representatives is not calling for a national effort to seize to destroy a political memoir," the judge said.
John Bolton claims: "President Trump is unfit for office" // Photo: Reuters
The book, called "The Room where Everything Happened: My Memories of the White House," has already been circulated and leaked to dozens of media outlets across the United States, generously citing it. Among the quoted items was a statement that the President asked Chinese President Xi Jinping to help him be elected, which the Secretary of State claimed was "full of **" and claimed that Prime Minister Netanyahu was surprised by the election of Jared Kushner to head the Middle East peace effort and that Find him unfit for the job.
Prime Minister Netanyahu has full confidence in Jared Kushner's abilities and determination and he rejects any other claim. Kushner has not yet done much to advance the Middle East peace process. The US administration team, led by Kushner, has drafted the president's principles Trump and his vision for Middle East peace. "
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called him a "traitor" after the former accused President Trump of a string of acts and claimed he was unfit for office.
"It's sad and dangerous that Bolton's last job is that of a traitor who hurt America by violating holy trust with the residents," said Pompeo, who was the last on the president's allied list to condemn Bolton's remarks.