Chicago Sun-Times

Lawmakers: Noevidence to back Trump’s wiretap claims

House hearings will look into other types of surveillan­ce

- David Jackson @ djusatoday USA TODAY

A day before a high- stakes hearing, the leaders of the House Intelligen­ce Committee said Sunday there’s no evidence to back President Trump’s claims that Barack Obama wiretapped him, though the Republican chairman said investigat­ors are looking at other types of possible surveillan­ce of Trump and his aides during last year’s campaign.

“We have a lot of surveillan­ce activities in this country,” said Rep. Devin Nunes, R- Calif., chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, speaking on Fox News Sunday.

The panel’s ranking Democrat, Rep. Adam Schiff of California, told NBC’s

Meet the Press that Trump’s wiretappin­g claims are “patently false, and the wrecking ball it created now has banged into” U. S. allies, including Germany and Great Britain.

“This is just how the president does business,” Schiff told NBC. Sen. Susan Collins, R- Maine, said on

Meet the Press that “I don’t know the basis for President Trump’s assertion,” and “I do believe he owes us that explanatio­n.”

Monday’s hearing features testimony from FBI Director James Comey, who has asked the Justice Department to publicly rebuke Trump’s claims against Obama. Schiff said he expects Comey to also say there is no truth to Trump’s statements about Obama, and “I hope we can put an end to this wild goose chase.”

The House Intelligen­ce Committee hearings also are looking into efforts by Russia to influence last year’s election by hacking Democratic officials close to nominee Hillary Clinton, the subject of an ongoing investigat­ion by the FBI.

During his Fox News appearance, Nunes said he has seen no evidence of collusion between Trump associates and the Russians during the election.

On NBC, Schiff said that “at the outset of the investigat­ion, there was circumstan­tial evidence of collusion,” as well as “direct evidence, I think, of deception.”

The committee hearing comes more than two weeks after Trump leveled his accusation­s against Obama in an early Saturday morning tweet storm. One tweet said: “Terrible! Just found out that Obama had my ‘ wires tapped’ in Trump Tower just before the victory. Nothing found. This is McCarthyis­m!”

The charges brought furious denials from Obama aides — who pointed out that the law forbids presidents from ordering wiretaps — to a diplomatic flap with the United Kingdom, which protested claims by Trump allies that British allies may have been involved in the wiretappin­g.

Nunes said Monday’s hearing would look into the possibly illegal leaking of national security informatio­n since Trump’s election in November. Nunes cited the case of former national security adviser Michael Flynn, dismissed by Trump for mischaract­erizing his discussion­s with the Russian ambassador to the United States, a topic that surfaced publicly because of news leaks.

Trump and aides also have denied any connection to Russians who sought to hack Democratic officials during last year’s election, and said opponents are leaking derogatory informatio­n as part of a “witch hunt” to undermine the presidency.

Since Trump’s March 4 tweets, he and aides have sought to re- define the terms of his accusation­s. While Trump used the term “wire tapping,” he and his aides say that now refers to “surveillan­ce” in general.

A number of Republican­s have expressed skepticism about Trump’s tweets on Obama. House Speaker Paul Ryan, RW is., told Fox News Sunday that he has seen no evidence of wiretappin­g Trump Tower, and said he is leaving it to committees to investigat­e, “I want to get on with passing our agenda,” Ryan said.

Despite a rising number of officials who say there is no evidence, Trump and aides have not backed down.

During a Friday news conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel — whose phones had been tapped by the Obama administra­tion — Trump told his guest: “As far as wiretappin­g, I guess by this past administra­tion, at least we have something in common, perhaps.”

The wiretap accusation also triggered a diplomatic row with another ally, as Trump and aides cited a report by Fox News commentato­r Andrew Napolitano that Obama asked a British intelligen­ce agency to tap Trump. The British government objected and the Trump administra­tion vowed not to use the claim again.

Trump’s wiretappin­g claims are “patently false, and the wrecking ball it created now has banged into” U. S. allies. Rep. Adam Schiff, D- Calif.

 ?? SAUL LOEB, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? President Trump
SAUL LOEB, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES President Trump

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