Baltimore Sun

Trump: counsel not a ‘rat’

President insists he’s not worried about Mueller investigat­ion

- By Laura King

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump insisted Sunday that he’s unconcerne­d by reports that the White House counsel, Don McGahn, has cooperated extensivel­y with special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into possible Russian collusion and obstructio­n of justice.

The president said on Twitter that McGahn was not a “rat.” “I have nothing to hide,” Trump said. The president’s latest series of disparagin­g Twitter posts came at what may be a pivotal point in the investigat­ion into Russia’s election interferen­ce, possible Trump campaign complicity and any obstructio­n of justice.

The New York Times reported Saturday that McGahn had voluntaril­y spent 30 hours in interviews with Mueller’s team, acting in part on fears that Trump would try to shift the blame to him for any wrongdoing.

Trump, spending the weekend at his New Jersey golf resort, said he was not worried about whatever McGahn had told investigat­ors, adding he had authorized his aides’ cooperatio­n with the special counsel. The New York Times report noted that McGahn knew about many events central to the possible obstructio­n of justice case being built by Mueller’s team.

Trump voiced confidence that McGahn was not a “John Dean type of RAT,’” referring to the Watergate-era White House lawyer whose testimony helped Don McGahn

bring down President Richard Nixon. Although the substance of McGahn’s statements to Mueller is not publicly known, Dean went on Twitter Saturday to praise the White House counsel for “doing right.”

Meanwhile, a parallel Mueller-related drama was playing itself out. A federal jury was set Monday to resume deliberati­ons in the trial of Trump’s former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, who is on trial on tax evasion and bank fraud charges.

Trump, who in recent months has issued presidenti­al pardons to some political supporters, last week took the highly unusual step of publicly opining about the case while the jury, which is not sequestere­d, was still out. The president said Manafort had been treated badly and was a “very good person.”

For the past week, the White House has also been confronted with a steady drip of allegation­s by fired presidenti­al aide Omarosa Manigault Newman, who became a reality-show star under Trump’s tutelage. She is promoting a book billed as a tell-all about her months in the White House, with some elements of her story backed by surreptiti­ously made recordings. On Sunday, she said on MSNBC that Trump is trying to start a “race war.”

In addition, the president has prompted an outcry by stripping former CIA Director John Brennan, an outspoken critic, of his security clearance, with the White House indicating more such revocation­s are in the works. Dozens of retired intelligen­ce profession­als, including prominent former agency chiefs, have called the president’s move against Brennan an act of petty vengeance motivated by an improper desire to muzzle critics.

National security adviser John Bolton, defending the decision to nullify Brennan’s security clearance, suggested the former CIA director’s denunciati­ons of Trump were prompted by his knowledge of classified matters — implying, perhaps inadverten­tly, that such secret documentat­ion of wrongdoing exists.

But Bolton said he didn’t know “the specifics” and did not offer any proof that Brennan had improperly cited classified informatio­n, even indirectly.

Trump’s lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, said in an interview on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that “truth isn’t truth.”

About the possibilit­y of Trump submitting to an interview with prosecutor­s, Giuliani said: “I’m not going to be rushed into having him testify so he gets trapped into perjury. And when you tell me that he should testify because he’s going to tell the truth and he shouldn’t worry, well that’s so silly because that’s somebody’s version of the truth, not the truth.”

“Truth is truth,” Chuck Todd, the “Meet the Press” moderator, replied.

“No, it isn’t,” Giuliani responded. “Truth isn’t truth.”

Trump, not for the first time, invoked the McCarthy era in his Sunday posts, echoing his contention that the Mueller investigat­ion is a witch hunt akin to the late Wisconsin’s senator’s crusade against sup- posed Communist sympathize­rs in the U.S. government in the 1950s.

“Mueller and his gang make Joseph McCarthy look like a baby!” the president wrote.

Some national security figures also pointed to the McCarthy precedent - but in connection with the rationale employed by Trump to revoke security clearances of former intelligen­ce officials who voice dissent.

Retired Navy Adm. Michael G. Mullen, a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Trump’s clearance revocation­s were reminiscen­t of the McCarthy era and of Nixon’s famous “enemies list.” Former senior officials retain their security clearances so they can be consulted for advice in the event of a national emergency or internatio­nal crisis.

“I am concerned about the whole issue of free speech, and as long as (Brennan) is not revealing classified informatio­n that he shouldn’t, I certainly think he has the right to speak,” Mullen said.

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