Call & Times

Trump on Michael Flynn’s guilty plea: ‘There’s been absolutely no collusion’

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In his first public comments about Michael Flynn pleading guilty Friday to lying to the FBI about his interactio­ns with a Russian official, President Donald Trump reiterated Saturday that his campaign did not collude with Russia during last year's presidenti­al election.

"What has been shown is no collusion. No collusion. There's been absolutely – there's been absolutely no collusion, so we're very happy," Trump told reporters Saturday morning before departing for a fundraisin­g trip to New York.

The president's comments come the day after his former national security adviser pleaded guilty to lying about his contacts with thenRussia­n Ambassador Sergey Kislyak. In a statement Friday, Flynn said he has agreed to cooperate with special counsel Robert Mueller's team in its ongoing investigat­ion into the Kremlin's attempts to influence the 2016 election, including possible coordinati­on with the Trump campaign.

The plea deal marks the first time Mueller's investigat­ion has incriminat­ed someone who worked in the White House and who was personally close to Trump. Unlike previous charges against top Trump campaign aides Paul Manafort and Rick Gates, it actually involved actions taken on Trump's behalf. Another lower-level campaign aide, foreign policy adviser George Papadopoul­os, has also pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI. The key question now is what Flynn knows that could incriminat­e others and what he might have offered in exchange for such a lenient plea deal.

Flynn, who was forced out of the White House after just less than a month on the job, admitted that he lied to the FBI about conversati­ons he had with Kislyak in December. Court records say Flynn contacted the Russian ambassador on Dec. 22 about the Trump administra­tion's opposition to a U.N. resolution against Israeli settlement­s. Flynn called Kislyak again on Dec. 29 to ask Russia not to escalate an ongoing feud over sanctions imposed the day before by the Obama administra­tion, court records say.

Flynn admitted he was not truthful when asked by the FBI on Jan. 24 about those interactio­ns – and that officials on the president's transition team, including a "very senior member," knew that he had talked to the Russian ambassador, The Washington Post reported.

That member, who was not identified, directed Flynn to contact officials from foreign government­s, including Russia, about the U.N. resolution and told him that blocking it was Trump's top priority, court records say. People familiar with the matter told The Post that that official is the president's son-inlaw and top White House adviser, Jared Kushner.

Flynn also admitted that he spoke with another member of the transition team before he talked to Kislyak about U.S. sanctions on Dec. 29, court records say. That senior official is also not identified in court records, but people familiar with the matter told The Post that it is K.T. McFarland, now a nominee for U.S. ambassador to Singapore.

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