On Russian meddling
Acknowledgment is president’s first of election interference
USA TODAY WASHINGTON President Trump appeared to acknowledge that Russia attempted to influence the 2016 presidential election — but only so he could blame former president Barack Obama.
“Just out: The Obama Administration knew far in advance of November 8th about election meddling by Russia. Did nothing about it. WHY?” Trump tweeted Friday night.
This is a rare instance in which the president has acknowledged what the intelligence community and bipartisan members of Congress already have, which is that Russia attempted to interfere with the presidential election.
Until Friday, Trump had remained vague about whether he believes the Russians meddled. Earlier last week, the president said on Twitter that talk of the alleged meddling was “all a big Dem HOAX!” and “excuse for losing the election!”
“I have not sat down and talked with him about that specific thing,” press secretary Sean Spicer said to reporters earlier in the week after being asked whether Trump believed the Russian government interfered. Conversations about Russian interference have been going on for nearly a year, and that’s now being investigated by multiple congressional committees and a special counsel.
But following a Washington Post report Friday, Trump seemed to have changed his approach.
The Washington Post published a lengthy investigation of how the Obama administration had handled discoveries that the Russians were attempting to influence the outcome of the 2016 election. The report shows the handwringing that officials went through on how to respond and how and when to alert the public.
While Obama did authorize a cyber operation that would make it possible to retaliate against Russia, it was still in the early stages when Trump took office.
In an interview with Fox News that is set to air Sunday, Trump said: “I just heard today for the first time that Obama knew about Russia a long time before the election, and he did nothing about it.
“The CIA gave him information on Russia a long time before they even — before the election,” he said. “The question is, if he had the information, why didn’t he do something about it? He should have done something about it.” COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO. NFL Hall of Famer Deion Sanders announced plans Saturday to join forces with the conservative Koch brothers to launch a new $21 million venture to work on anti-poverty programs in Dallas.
The project, called Prime 5, will expand the Kochs’ work with two existing Dallas programs focused on building young entrepreneurs and reducing gang violence. Organizers plan to expand their support to other groups working in the city.
“Football and baseball is what I played, but this is what I am,” said Sanders, now a network sports commentator, of his focus on community work and the new venture with the billionaire industrialists.
Sanders and Evan Feinberg, who runs Koch-funded group Stand Together, made the announcement on the opening day of a three-day retreat attended by Charles Koch and the hundreds of donors who help fund projects that advance Koch’s free-market, small-government agenda.
Sanders, who attended his first Koch gathering earlier this year in Indian Wells, Calif., said Koch and his brother have been “targeted unfairly.” He described the Kochs as a family with the “desire to make this country a better place.”
“I am thankful to be partnering with them,” he said.
The Kochs’ donor network is among the most influential in Republican politics, rivaling the national party in staff and budget. One sign of their influence: Vice President Pence had a 50-minute face-to-face meeting Friday night with Charles Koch to talk about taxes, efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act and other policy matters.
The Kochs have committed millions to help advance the Trump administration’s tax cuts through Congress and are putting their muscle behind several of President Trump’s picks for the federal bench.
The Kochs’ three-day retreat at the luxury Broadmoor Resort in the Rocky Mountains will help the network craft its strategy ahead of the 2018 midterm elections and gain support for new community efforts to spread donors’ free-market message.
Stand Together, one of the fastest-growing groups in the Koch network, provides seed money and advice to private organizations working on anti-poverty programs.
Earlier this year, the network officials announced plans to raise and spend between $300 million and $400 million in 2017 and 2018 to advance their policy and political agenda, a boost from the $250 million they spent during the 2016 cycle.
For his part, Sanders said he was steering clear of politics and untroubled by any public blowback from his partnership with the Kochs.
“I’ve been criticized since I was 16 years old,” Sanders told reporters Saturday. “I’ve been booed by 90,000 that sung my name like a quartet.”
Sanders will serve on the “board of managers” of the new group and said he plans active involvement in fundraising and management.
Feinberg said Prime 5 is aimed at tackling what the Koch network views as the five drivers of poverty: joblessness, educational failure, addiction, personal debt and the breakdown of the family.
Asked about the group’s name, Sanders, known as “Prime Time” during his pro days, quickly chimed in: “Well, ‘Prime’ is a beautiful name.”