Albuquerque Journal

Site with GOP ties funded Trump research

Conservati­ve group insists its early work wasn’t in later dossier

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NEW YORK — A conservati­ve website with strong ties to the Republican establishm­ent first retained the firm that investigat­ed Donald Trump’s past — and ultimately produced a dossier that alleged a compromise­d relationsh­ip between the president and the Kremlin.

The Washington Free Beacon on Friday confirmed it had originally funded research compiled by the firm Fusion GPS. But leaders from the Free Beacon, which is funded in large part by the Republican donor Paul Singer, insisted that none of the early research it received appears in the dossier released later in the year detailing explosive allegation­s, many uncorrobor­ated, about Trump compiled by a former British spy.

“During the 2016 election cycle we retained Fusion GPS to provide research on multiple candidates in the Republican presidenti­al primary, just as we retained other firms to assist in our research into Hillary Clinton,” wrote the site’s editor-inchief, Matthew Continetti, and chairman Michael Goldfarb.

They continued: “The Free Beacon had no knowledge of or connection to the Steele dossier, did not pay for the dossier, and never had contact with, knowledge of, or provided payment for any work performed by Christophe­r Steele.”

Earlier in the week, reports revealed that the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee continued funding Fusion’s work after the original GOP source lost interest.

Trump this week called it a “disgrace” that Democrats had helped pay for research that produced the document.

The Washington Free Beacon was initially founded as a project of the conservati­ve nonprofit group Center for American Freedom, as an alternativ­e to liberal news sites run by progressiv­e nonprofits. The Center for American Freedom was organized as a 501(c)4 and did not reveal its donors, but a person close to Goldfarb said Singer was an early backer of the project. Later, the Free Beacon was spun-off into a for-profit website.

Goldfarb was deputy communicat­ions director on John McCain’s presidenti­al campaign.

Singer has been a major player in Republican politics in recent years and maintains ties to Florida Sen. Marco Rubio and several powerful Republican­s, including House Speaker Paul Ryan.

Singer was backing Rubio’s presidenti­al bid at the time of the Free Beacon’s involvemen­t. Rubio’s team insisted this week that they had no knowledge of the dossier.

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