Los Angeles Times

GOP shuns Trump ‘spy’ theory

Top Republican­s fail to endorse president’s claim of improper FBI surveillan­ce of his 2016 campaign.

- By Chris Megerian and Eli Stokols

WASHINGTON — The air seems to be going out of “Spygate.”

While President Trump still touts the unfounded claim that the Obama administra­tion improperly spied on his 2016 campaign, senior Republican lawmakers have steered clear of the conspiracy theory since they received classified briefings last week on the role of an FBI confidenti­al informant in an investigat­ion aimed at unmasking Russian interferen­ce in the election.

That silence broke when Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.), one of the few who got the Justice Department briefing, said he believed the FBI acted appropriat­ely when the informant, a retired American academic living in England, met with three of Trump’s campaign aides.

“When the FBI comes into contact with informatio­n about what a foreign government may be doing in our election cycle, I think they have an obligation to run it out,” Gowdy, a former federal prosecutor, said Wednesday on CBS News.

“I think when the president finds out what happened, he is going to be not just fine, he is going to be glad that we have an FBI that took seriously what they heard,” Gowdy, who is not running for reelection, said a day earlier on Fox News, Trump’s favorite cable news network.

The pushback was noteworthy since Gowdy, who chairs the House Oversight Committee, earned a reputation among Democrats as a partisan attack dog for leading the pursuit of Hillary Clinton after a terrorist attack in 2012 killed four Americans in Benghazi, Libya, while she was secretary of State.

He also has worked closely with Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Tulare), who chairs the House Intelligen­ce Committee and has

spearheade­d Republican inquiries into the Russia investigat­ion and spread still unproven allegation­s of improper surveillan­ce of the Trump campaign.

White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Wednesday that Trump would not back down from his claims about what he has called “Spygate.”

“The president still has concerns,” she said.

Trump also took another public swipe at Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions, whom he nominated last year to lead the Justice Department but has bitterly criticized for his decision to step aside from overseeing the Russia investigat­ion because he had served as a senior Trump campaign aide.

Ironically, Trump quoted Gowdy to issue his latest condemnati­on on Twitter, noting that the congressma­n had acknowledg­ed the president’s frustratio­n at discoverin­g that Sessions had recused himself from a politicall­y charged investigat­ion aimed directly at the White House.

“‘There are lots of really good lawyers in the country, he could have picked somebody else!’ And I wish I did!” Trump tweeted.

The tweet followed a New York Times report that Trump had demanded Sessions reverse his recusal in March 2017 but that the attorney general had refused. The episode could factor into special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigat­ion into whether Trump sought to obstruct justice by interferin­g with the Russia investigat­ion.

Trump also responded Wednesday to ABC’s decision to cancel the hit show “Roseanne” because the show’s star sent a racist tweet comparing an African American official in the Obama administra­tion to an ape. While much of the nation condemned Rosanne Barr’s tweet, Trump used the incident to complain about his own treatment by ABC.

In his tweet, Trump criticized the network, not Barr, whose revived sitcom depicted a blue-collar Midwestern family that voted for the president.

“Bob Iger of ABC called Valerie Jarrett to let her know that ‘ABC does not tolerate comments like those’ made by Roseanne Barr. Gee, he never called President Donald J. Trump to apologize for the HORRIBLE statements made and said about me on ABC. Maybe I just didn’t get the call?” he wrote.

Iger, chief executive of ABC’s parent company, Walt Disney Co., quit the president’s business advisory council in June 2017, protesting the U.S. withdrawal from the Paris climate accord.

Later he called Trump’s decision to end protection­s for young immigrants known as “Dreamers” as “cruel and misguided.”

Trump’s tweet contradict­ed statements by his press secretary, who repeatedly told reporters Tuesday that the president had more important concerns than the cancellati­on of a TV sitcom.

“That’s not what the president is looking at,” Sanders said when pressed about Trump’s reaction. “That’s not what’s he’s spending his time on. I think we have a lot bigger things going on in the country right now.”

At the White House on Wednesday, Sanders redirected a question about Trump’s tweet into an extended protest about what she called bias against the president.

“The president’s simply calling out the media bias,” she said. “No one’s defending what [Barr] said.” Sanders underlined her point by asking, “Where was the apology?” after various attacks on Trump.

She called out several critics by name, including Jemele Hill, who is no longer anchoring “SportsCent­er” on ESPN months after her tweets criticizin­g the president earned her a suspension; as well as Kathy Griffin, the comedian who lost her New Year’s Eve hosting duties at CNN and has been ostracized by many in Hollywood after appearing in an image depicting Trump’s severed head.

Trump is notorious for his own refusal to apologize after generating controvers­y or for comments that were widely viewed as offensive.

His videotaped expression of regret in October 2016 for his lewd and predatory comments about women in a 2005 “Access Hollywood” segment is an outlier, and he later suggested those remarks might have been faked.

As a businessma­n, then a candidate and now president, Trump has stoked public outrage for his crass attacks on Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) for having been shot down and captured during the Vietnam War, callous remarks to a Gold Star family and sometimes profane name-calling of his political opponents, journalist­s and athletes.

In most cases, Trump has answered calls for an apology with claims that he is being unfairly attacked.

But in the case of the FBI informant, few Republican leaders are defending his assertion that his political opponents “spied” on his campaign.

House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who participat­ed in the Justice Department briefings, haven’t backed up Trump’s claims of wrongdoing.

The caution from Republican leaders stands in stark contrast to Trump’s claims at a rally in Nashville on Tuesday night.

“How do you like the fact they had people infiltrati­ng our campaign?” he bellowed as the crowd booed. “Can you imagine? Can you imagine?”

Nunes has not spoken publicly about the FBI informant since the May 24 briefings. The apparent collapse of the “Spygate” theory, at least in Congress, is the third allegation from Nunes related to the Russia inquiry to sputter out under scrutiny.

He told reporters outside the White House in March 2017 that the Obama administra­tion may have improperly eavesdropp­ed on Trump’s team in New York during the presidenti­al transition. A House ethics investigat­ion later cleared Nunes of having improperly disclosed classified informatio­n, and no evidence of illegal surveillan­ce of the Trump campaign has surfaced.

More recently, Nunes also demanded classified Justice Department documents that he later used to write a public memo about FBI eavesdropp­ing on Carter Page, a former Trump campaign aide who the FBI suspected might be a Russian agent.

The memo harshly criticized law enforcemen­t for including Democratic-funded opposition research in the applicatio­n for a warrant and not telling the judge the informatio­n came from an opposing political party. In a rare public response, the FBI warned that it had “grave concerns about material omissions of fact that fundamenta­lly impact the memo’s accuracy.”

A spokesman for Nunes did not respond to a request for comment. But before the Justice Department briefings last week, he was making eye-popping claims.

“If any of that is true — if they ran a spy ring or an informant ring and they were paying people within the Trump campaign — if any of that is true, that is an absolute red line,” Nunes told Fox News on May 20.

Such statements have been fodder for Trump’s legal team, particular­ly former New York Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, who repeatedly said the special counsel investigat­ion could be illegitima­te.

“We need to see reports on this spy situation, and see what the basis was, what the outcome was,” he told The Times last week.

Giuliani did not return a request for comment on Wednesday.

Mueller has secured five guilty pleas and also charged Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign chairman, with nearly two dozen financial crimes unrelated to the election.

None of Trump’s aides has been charged with assisting a Russian effort to meddle in the race, although 13 Russians have been indicted for their suspected roles.

 ?? Mark Wilson Getty Images ?? REP. TREY GOWDY (R-S.C.), contradict­ing the president, said the FBI acted appropriat­ely in using an informant who interacted with the Trump campaign.
Mark Wilson Getty Images REP. TREY GOWDY (R-S.C.), contradict­ing the president, said the FBI acted appropriat­ely in using an informant who interacted with the Trump campaign.
 ?? J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press ?? HOUSE SPEAKER Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.), who attended a classified briefing on the issue, hasn’t backed up President Trump’s assertions.
J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press HOUSE SPEAKER Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.), who attended a classified briefing on the issue, hasn’t backed up President Trump’s assertions.

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