The Day

Trump says he’s ‘unlikely’ to give Mueller an interview

He blasts Feinstein for release of dossier interview transcript

- By MARY CLARE JALONICK

Washington — President Donald Trump said Wednesday that it “seems unlikely” he’d give an interview in special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into potential coordinati­on between Russia and the Trump campaign.

Trump said “we’ll see what happens” when asked if he’d provide an interview to Mueller’s team.

“When they have no collusion and nobody’s found any collusion at any level, it seems unlikely that you’d even have an interview,” Trump said during a joint news conference with the prime minister of Norway.

The special counsel’s team of investigat­ors has expressed interest in speaking with Trump, but no details have been worked out. Trump’s lawyers have previously stated their determinat­ion to cooperate with requests in the probe, which has already resulted in charges against four of Trump’s campaign advisers.

Trump called the investigat­ion a “phony cloud” over his administra­tion.

“It has hurt our government,” he said. “It was a Democrat hoax.”

Trump’s words differed from what he said at a news conference in June, shortly after fired FBI Director James Comey had told Congress that Trump asked him for a pledge of loyalty. Trump denied that, and said he’d be “100 percent” willing to tell his version of events under oath. He said he’d be “glad to” speak to Mueller about it.

The comments come after Trump had already lashed out at the investigat­ions on Twitter Wednesday morning, urging Republican­s to take control of the inquiries and repeating his

claim that they are on a “witch hunt.”

“There was no collusion, everybody including the Dems knows there was no collusion, & yet on and on it goes,” he tweeted. “Russia & the world is laughing at the stupidity they are witnessing. Republican­s should finally take control!”

In a separate tweet Wednesday morning, Trump accused Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of being “underhande­d and a disgrace” for disclosing details of a dossier of allegation­s about his ties to Russia during the presidenti­al campaign.

A day earlier, Feinstein, who faces a primary challenge in her re-election this year, released the transcript of the Senate Judiciary Committee’s closed-door August interview with an official from the political opposition research firm Fusion GPS, which commission­ed the dossier. She released the transcript of Glenn Simpson’s interview over the objections of the committee’s Republican chairman, Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley. She is the top Democrat on the panel.

“The fact that Sneaky Dianne Feinstein, who has on numerous occasions stated that collusion between Trump/Russia has not been found, would release testimony in such an underhande­d and possibly illegal way, totally without authorizat­ion, is a disgrace,” Trump tweeted. “Must have tough Primary!”

The material wasn’t classified, and Feinstein said Wednesday that she didn’t do anything illegal. And as the top Democrat on the committee, she didn’t need authorizat­ion from Grassley to release it. Her staff helped conduct the interview with Simpson, who had also asked for the interview to be released.

Still, the release was a blow the two lawmakers’ earlier attempts at bipartisan­ship on the committee’s Russia investigat­ion. Feinstein told reporters that she didn’t tell Grassley beforehand, and “I owe him an apology and I will give him an apology as soon as I see him.”

Grassley said in an angry news release on Tuesday that he was “confounded” by the release and argued that it could undermine attempts to get additional witnesses. By Wednesday he appeared to have softened, saying he was continuing to negotiate witnesses with Feinstein in the Russia probe.

“Listen, I screw up regularly and she doesn’t owe me an apology,” Grassley said.

Trump has derided the dossier as a politicall­y motivated hit job. Following his lead, several GOP-led committees are now investigat­ing whether the dossier formed the basis for the FBI’s initial investigat­ions. That has angered Democrats, who say those probes are distractio­ns from the Russia investigat­ions.

Feinstein said that she was trying to set the record straight after speculatio­n about Simpson’s interview.

“The innuendo and misinforma­tion circulatin­g about the transcript are part of a deeply troubling effort to undermine the investigat­ion into potential collusion and obstructio­n of justice,” she said. “The only way to set the record straight is to make the transcript public.”

Feinstein also sits on the Senate intelligen­ce committee, which is conducting its own investigat­ion into the Russian interferen­ce and whether Trump’s campaign was in any way involved.

Trump has often invoked Feinstein on the collusion issue. She said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” on Oct. 8 that there’s “no proof” yet that there was any collusion between Russia and Trump’s campaign, adding: “I think that proof will likely come with Mr. Mueller’s investigat­ion.”

Feinstein faces a primary from California state Senate leader Kevin de Leon. Asked about Trump’s tweet, she brushed off the idea that the release had anything to do with her election.

“Oh come on,” she said. “Of course not.”

Virginia Sen. Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate intelligen­ce committee, also criticized Trump’s tweet, saying it “smacks of interferen­ce in investigat­ions and I think that’s inappropri­ate.”

Also Wednesday, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who appointed Mueller, and FBI Director Christophe­r Wray were on Capitol Hill to speak to Warner and the Republican chairman of the Senate intelligen­ce panel, North Carolina Sen. Richard Burr. Neither senator would comment on the meeting’s purpose.

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