The Columbus Dispatch

Trump calls allegation­s ‘ridiculous’

- By Erica Werner and Darlene Superville

WASHINGTON — Brimming with resentment, President Donald Trump fervently denied on Thursday that his campaign had collaborat­ed with Russia or that he’d tried to kill an FBI probe of the issue, contending that “even my enemies” recognize his innocence and declaring himself the most unfairly hounded president in history.

Asked point- blank if he’d done anything that might merit prosecutio­n or even impeachmen­t, he said no and then added concerning the allegation­s and questions that have mounted as he nears the four-month mark of his presidency: “I think it’s totally ridiculous.

Everybody thinks so.”

Not quite everybody. While Trump tweeted and voiced his indignatio­n at the White House, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who appointed an independen­t special counsel to lead a heightened federal TrumpRussi­a investigat­ion the day before, briefed the entire Senate behind closed doors at the Capitol. By several senators’ accounts, he contradict­ed Trump’s statements that Rosenstein’s written criticism of FBI Director James Comey had been a factor in Comey’s recent firing by the president.

Trump is leaving today for his first foreign trip, to the Mideast and beyond, and aides had hoped the disarray at home would have been calmed if not resolved, allowing the White House to refocus and move ahead. Republican­s on Capitol Hill hoped the same, reasoning that the appointmen­t of a special counsel could free them to work on a major tax overhaul and other matters without constant distractio­ns.

Trump said he was about to name a replacemen­t for Comey, another move to settle the waters. Former Connecticu­t Sen. Joe Lieberman was seen as the front-runner. But calmness seemed far off. Trump clearly knew what he wanted to say as he took a few questions at a news briefing with visiting Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos.

Did he urge Comey at a February meeting to drop his probe of the Russia connection­s of Trump’s national security adviser, Michael Flynn? “No. No. Next question.” Did he in fact collude with Russia in his campaign to defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton?

“Everybody, even my enemies, have said there is no collusion,” he maintained.

However another answer on that subject seemed both more specific and perhaps ambiguous.

“There is no collusion between certainly myself and my campaign — but I can only speak for myself — and the Russians. Zero.”

“The entire thing has been a witch hunt,” he declared, echoing one of the tweets he’d sent out just after dawn: “This is the single greatest witch hunt of a politician in American history!”

He said he respected the special counsel appointmen­t but also said it “hurts our country terribly.”

At the other end of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue, Rosenstein was briefing the Senate about his decision to appoint former FBI Director Robert Mueller to lead the independen­t TrumpRussi­a probe.

Senators said that Rosenstein steered clear of specifics while making clear that Mueller has wide latitude to pursue the investigat­ion wherever it leads, including potentiall­y criminal charges. Despite the president’s furious reaction, some fellow Republican­s welcomed Mueller’s appointmen­t and expressed hopes it would restore some composure to a capital plunged in chaos.

“We’ll get rid of the smoke and see where the actual issues lie,” said Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C. “I do think that the special prosecutor provides a sense of calm and confidence perhaps for the American people, which is incredibly important.”

The Justice Department says Mueller, the new special counsel, has been given sweeping power to investigat­e Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, including potential links between Moscow and Trump associates.

Despite initially opposing appointmen­t of an independen­t counsel, Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan said Thursday that the developmen­t “helps assure people and the Justice Department that they’re going to go do their jobs independen­tly and thoroughly, which is what we’ve called for all along.”

At the same time, congressio­nal committees are continuing their own investigat­ions, leading to some turf warfare and sniping as the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee and the Senate Judiciary Committee both sought to lay claim to testimony from Comey, while the House Oversight Committee also hoped to hear from the former director.

The House intelligen­ce committee announced that it had asked for documents from the FBI and the Justice Department.

 ?? [ANDREW HARNIK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? President Donald Trump, accompanie­d by Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, left, calls on a reporter during a news conference Thursday in the East Room of the White House.
[ANDREW HARNIK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] President Donald Trump, accompanie­d by Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, left, calls on a reporter during a news conference Thursday in the East Room of the White House.

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