Houston Chronicle

Trump assails ‘leakers, cowards’ but not hateful words on McCain

- By Darlene Superville and Jill Colvin

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump called West Wing leakers “traitors and cowards” on Monday as a dustup over a White House aide’s crass remark about Arizona Sen. John McCain extended into a fifth day.

In a Monday afternoon tweet, Trump said the “leaks coming out of the White House are a massive over exaggerati­on put out by the Fake News Media in order to make us look as bad as possible.”

He added of the leakers: “We will find out who they are!”

During a closed-door meeting last week, Trump communicat­ions aide Kelly Sadler dismissed McCain’s opposition to the president’s CIA nominee by saying of the Arizona Republican: “He’s dying anyway.” The 81year-old McCain was diagnosed in July with glioblasto­ma, an aggressive form of brain cancer.

White House spokesman Raj Shah said Monday that Sadler had been “dealt with internally.” But he refused to say how.

Pressed repeatedly on the issue at a briefing, Shah said Sadler apologized privately to the McCain family and still remains in her position. But Shah, who led the meeting in which Sadler made the comment, declined to say whether any disciplina­ry steps had been taken. He said he could not discuss how the situation was “addressed internally.”

McCain left Washington in December, and few expect him to return.

Sadler called the senator’s daughter Meghan, a co-host of ABC’s “The View,” to apologize last week. Meghan McCain told ABC News that, during their conversati­on, she’d asked Sadler to apologize publicly and that Sadler had agreed.

“I have not spoken to her since, and I assume that it will never come,” Meghan McCain told ABC.

Numerous lawmakers have called on the White House to apologize, including No. 2 Senate GOP Leader John Cornyn of Texas, said Monday: “The person who said it should apologize. It’s totally inappropri­ate.”

No. 3 Senate GOP leader John Thune of South Dakota said the White House could have handled the incident better.

“The smart thing to do would have been five days ago to just nip it in the bud and come out and apologize for it,” he said.

White House officials have condemned the leak of the private conversati­on, and some have expressed their support for Sadler.

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell steered clear of Sadler’s comment but praised the ailing Republican after visiting with him over the weekend in Arizona.

“I told him we miss him,” McConnell said in a Senate speech late Monday. “I was confident I was speaking for everybody in the Senate in conveying our deepest respects for him and all he’s done for the county in his extraordin­ary life.”

The comment by Sadler came after McCain, a Navy pilot who was beaten in captivity during the Vietnam War, urged his fellow senators to reject Trump’s nominee for CIA director, Gina Haspel. He said he believes she’s a patriot who loves the country but “her refusal to acknowledg­e torture’s immorality is disqualify­ing.”

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