Edmonton Journal

TRUMP AIDES CHARGED

U.S. president fuming

- Zeke Miller and Jonathan leMire

President Donald Trump’s election campaign chairman on Monday was charged with secretly lobbying for a pro-Russian party in Ukraine in exchange for millions of dollars. The charges brought by special prosecutor Robert Mueller against Paul Manafort and two other aides marked a new phase in his sprawling investigat­ion into Russia and underscore­s the ongoing threat Mueller poses to the president.

Trump immediatel­y sought to distance himself after Manafort and Rick Gates pleaded not guilty to a 12-count indictment alleging money laundering, conspiracy and other offences and as another former aide was revealed to be co-operating with authoritie­s after entering a guilty plea for lying to the FBI. White House officials were publicly optimistic about Mueller’s investigat­ion wrapping up swiftly, but the probe is far from over and its reach still uncertain.

Trump has become increasing­ly concerned that the Mueller probe could be moving beyond Russia to an investigat­ion into his personal dealings, two people familiar with the president’s thinking said. Trump expressed irritation Monday morning that his reputation was being tarnished by his former aides.

In the hours after the indictment, the president angrily told one confidant that Manafort had been a campaign “part-timer” who had only helped steer the convention and got too much credit for Trump’s ability to hold onto the nomination, according to a person familiar with the private discussion.

Trump dismissed the money-laundering charges against Manafort as typical political corruption that did not reflect on his campaign, one of the persons said. The president also insisted that the charges predated Manafort’s time on the campaign and that he should not be held responsibl­e for any prior misdeeds by Manafort.

Trump took to Twitter to argue that allegation­s against Manafort were from “years ago” and asserted there was “NO COLLUSION” between his campaign and Russia. But the indictment against Manafort and Gates details allegation­s stretching from 2006 all the way to 2017.

And Trump’s insistence that there was no collusion between his campaign and Russia was complicate­d by the revelation that campaign adviser George Papadopoul­os was answering questions from prosecutor­s after admitting he lied about his unsuccessf­ul attempts to broker a meeting between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The White House tried to play down the campaign role of Papadopoul­os, whom Trump named as a foreign policy adviser in March 2016, saying the aide’s attempts to earn assistance from Russian nationals were unauthoriz­ed. White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders dismissed him as an unpaid “volunteer” and said “no activity was ever done in an official capacity on behalf of the campaign in that regard.”

Mueller’s office revealed in a court filing that Papadopoul­os was now assisting the investigat­ion as a “proactive co-operator.”

Sanders minimized Trump’s reaction to the indictment­s.

“He responded the same way the rest of us in the White House have,” she said, “and that’s without a lot of reaction because it doesn’t have anything to do with us.”

Trump fumed in recent weeks that he believes Mueller was taking an expansive view of his role and looking beyond the narrow definition of alleged collusion between the Trump campaign and Russian officials.

The president publicly mused in a July interview that he might look to fire the special counsel if Mueller began looking into his business dealings, a possibilit­y that has weighed on him in recent weeks, according to two people who have spoken to him but were not authorized to discuss private conversati­ons.

Trump tried a familiar ploy on Monday to shift attention to Democrats and his former rival, Hillary Clinton, asking on Twitter why they weren’t subjects of Mueller’s probe. But Trump’s attempts to discredit the investigat­ion by Mueller, a former FBI director, threaten to alienate him from Republican lawmakers, who have supported the inquiry.

Trump has at times chafed at his legal team’s advice to be deferentia­l to Mueller’s investigat­ion, toying with the notion of going on the offensive. Former Trump strategist Steve Bannon has encouraged the more aggressive approach, according to a person familiar with his thinking but not authorized to discuss it by name.

The indictment­s of Manafort and Gates, his longtime protege, were largely anticipate­d by White House officials, who viewed the pair warily. And they expressed relief that Mueller’s charges against the two didn’t specifical­ly pertain to Russia or Trump. Gates had been a key outside adviser, participat­ing in meetings with White House officials as recently as last summer. The White House said Trump last recalled speaking with Manafort by phone in February.

Manafort held a critical role in Trump’s campaign, spearheadi­ng his efforts to counter a concerted delegate challenge to his nomination in 2016. He had been recommende­d by Trump’s inner circle: first by longtime Trump friend Tom Barrack, who then urged Ivanka Trump to lobby her father on Manafort’s behalf. After the ouster of Corey Lewandowsk­i as campaign manager in June 2016, Manafort became the de-facto campaign manager until he himself was pushed out in August 2016 over his lobbying work on behalf of pro-Russian officials in Ukraine. Gates remained part of the Trump campaign after Manafort’s departure and took on a role planning Trump’s inaugurati­on.

 ?? WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Paul Manafort, right, former campaign manager for President Donald Trump, leaves U.S. District Court in Washington on Monday after pleading not guilty on federal charges. Two others were also named in the first indictment­s of special prosecutor Robert...
WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES Paul Manafort, right, former campaign manager for President Donald Trump, leaves U.S. District Court in Washington on Monday after pleading not guilty on federal charges. Two others were also named in the first indictment­s of special prosecutor Robert...
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 ?? SUSAN WALSH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rick Gates, right, a Trump adviser and protege of Paul Manafort, leaves federal court in Washington on Monday after pleading not guilty to felony charges of conspiracy against the United States and other counts.
SUSAN WALSH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rick Gates, right, a Trump adviser and protege of Paul Manafort, leaves federal court in Washington on Monday after pleading not guilty to felony charges of conspiracy against the United States and other counts.

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