After closing the Midyear Clinton investigation in July 2016, the FBI re-opens the investigation in October 2016 because some of Clinton's server e-mails turn up in a new sexting scandal on Anthony Weiner's laptop computer.
The first episode ends with news reports that Clinton has called Trump to concede the election to him.
Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak lobbies Michael Flynn to end economic sanctions against Russia after Obama expels 35 Russian diplomats and announces further sanctions on Russia. After the 2016 election, James Clapper and other intel chiefs discuss the Steele dossier with Obama during a briefing at the White House.
After Trump's election in 2016, the U.S. intel chiefs meet with the Trump campaign in Trump Tower New York to state that Russian government agents are using fake social media accounts at YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram to duplicate pro-Trump propaganda at Russia Today and Sputnik Radio. Comey also accuses the Russians of attacking the voting process itself. The FBI intercepts five phone calls during which sanctions relief was discussed while Mike Pence tells Face the Nation that the phone calls between Kislyak and Flynn were about expressing condolences for the Russian plane crash.
Trump hosts Comey for a private dinner at the White House; during the meeting, Trump demands loyalty. Afterwards, Trump fires Sally Yates. Trump tells Comey he didn't give "a billion dollars to Iran like Obama did."[3] Trump goes on to ask Comey to drop the FBI investigation of Flynn.
The fourth and final episode ends with the dismissal of Comey along with the firings, resignations, re-assignments, and retirements of several appointed officials at the FBI and DOJ.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, Anthony Hopkins was attached to the role of Trump at one point and Gleeson accepted the role with the stipulation that he would not have to do press for the series.[17] Daniels was the first choice for the role of Comey, though Liev Schreiber and Kyle Chandler were both considered as well.[17]
In June 2020, the series was revealed to be named The Comey Rule, and to consist of two episodes totalling four hours.[18] The show was originally due to premiere on Showtime after the 2020 United States presidential election.[1] However, following criticism from Ray concerning the airdate,[19] the series was rescheduled to premiere over two nights, beginning on September 27, 2020.[2] In the United Kingdom, the series aired in four parts on Sky Atlantic on September 30, 2020.[20] In Australia, the series aired the same dates as the United States on the streaming service Stan.[21] The series aired on WOWOW in Japan on November 1, 2020.[22] The series arrived on Netflix US on September 28, 2021.[23]
Reception
On review aggregatorRotten Tomatoes, the series holds an approval rating of 68% based on 40 reviews, with an average rating of 6.03/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Despite some impressive performances, The Comey Rule's chaotic approach to current events clarifies very little, further obscuring the facts of already confusing circumstances without adding much insight."[24] On Metacritic, it has a weighted average score of 58 out of 100, based on 28 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[25]
Daniel D'Addario of Variety gave the miniseries a negative review, specifying that it "bends and strains to accommodate Comey's showy displays of duty and righteousness," and that "Gleeson is at once the best and worst thing about The Comey Rule, uncannily evoking the president's aura of menace and doing so while pushing his performance past a bizarre sheath of makeup that misses the mark."[26] Laura Miller, writing in Slate, describes the miniseries as "the story of institutions run in accordance with norms and traditions that seem permanent but prove terrifyingly fragile. Comey gets out, but the rest of us are still living in the sequel."[27]
^"ザ・コミー・ルール 元FBI長官の告白 前編・後編" ["The Comey Rule, Parts 1 & 2" airings]. Wowow (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 15 November 2020. Retrieved 14 November 2020.