Trump calls for FBI lover Peter Strzok to go after his mistress Lisa Page quit as he mocks the vast number of messages they exchanged

  • Lisa Page resigned Friday, months after it was revealed she exchanged thousands of texts with FBI agent Peter Strzrok 
  • Strzok remains on the job, although he got reassigned
  • Trump mocked the former agent on Twitter, saying she holds the record for 'most Emails in the shortest period of time'
  • He asked while Strzok was still working and called it a 'total mess'
  • Emails came to light as part of probes of Russian election interference and Clinton email scandal 

Days after the resignation of one of the FBI lovers, President Donald Trump called for her paramour Peter Strzok to leave the bureau in what he termed a 'total mess.'

Lisa Page, who exchanged thousands of text messages with Strzok, resigned her job on Friday, after having gotten reassigned to a less powerful post. She was an advisor to deputy director Andrew McCabe, who attorney Jeff Sessions fired on the eve of his retirement, and briefly served on special counsel Robert Mueller's team.

Now Trump wants her paramour to follower her out the door. 

President Donald Trump put pressure on FBI agent Peter Strzok, days after the resignation of Lisa Page, who exchanged thousands of text messages with him

President Donald Trump put pressure on FBI agent Peter Strzok, days after the resignation of Lisa Page, who exchanged thousands of text messages with him

'Lisa Page, who may hold the record for the most Emails in the shortest period of time (to her Lover, Peter S), and attorney Baker, are out at the FBI as part of the Probers getting caught?' Trump wrote.

'Why is Peter S still there? What a total mess. Our Country has to get back to Business!' Trump wrote.

Trump's tweet also referenced former FBI general counsel James Baker, who was close to fired FBI Director James Comey.

Baker was reassigned last year, under suspicion about the leak of the infamous 'golden showers' dossier of unproven information about Donald Trump, Fox News reported. 

Trump went after Page, Strzok, and former FBI general counsel James Baker on Twitter

Trump went after Page, Strzok, and former FBI general counsel James Baker on Twitter

Lisa Page, who exchanged thousands of text messages, resigned her job at the FBI on Friday

Lisa Page, who exchanged thousands of text messages, resigned her job at the FBI on Friday

Peter Strzok remains at his post in the HR department of the FBI

Peter Strzok remains at his post in the HR department of the FBI

The FBI told Fox on Friday that Page had resigned to 'pursue other opportunities.'

Strzok got reassigned to the bureau's human resources division after his relationship with Page came to light along with some anti-Trump texts. 

In one text, Strzok calls Trump and 'idiot.' In another, Page wrote: 'God trump is a loathsome human.' 

The texts date back to 2015, shortly after Trump announced his plans to run for President.

The Justice Department investigated whether texts between FBI lovers Peter Strzok were deleted after concerns were raised by Congress over messages that appeared incomplete

Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz led the probe that uncovered thousands of FBI text messages, but has so far found no evidence of the texts being tampered with. It is unclear if the investigation is ongoing

Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz led the probe that uncovered thousands of FBI text messages, but has so far found no evidence of the texts being tampered with. It is unclear if the investigation is ongoing

Both Page and Strzok served for a time on Mueller's investigative team. Page left herself after a 45-day detail, while Strzok was removed after the texts came to light. 

Republicans and President Trump have used the saga to attack the Bureau and the Mueller investigation by claiming it was biased.

Asked about the scandal following his sacking by Trump, Comey said he had 'no idea' what was going on, but said he was extremely disappointed to hear about it.  

He told Fox News he would have 'removed both of them from any contact with significant investigations' if he was aware of the texts.

'It was such poor judgment,' Comey said.

He later told USA Today: 'It doesn't change my view of the case, but the FBI is a public-trust organization. That they are bad-mouthing candidates using FBI (phones) is terrible.' 

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