Trump Privately Rages As Russia Scandal Touches His Son
WASHINGTON
(AP) -- The snowballing revelations about Donald Trump Jr.'s
meeting with a Russian lawyer during last year's presidential campaign
have broadsided the White House, distracting from its agenda as aides
grapple with a crisis involving the president's family.
The
public has not laid eyes on the president since his return from Europe
Saturday. But in private, Trump has raged against the latest Russia
development, with most of his ire directed at the media, not his son,
according to people who have spoken to him in recent days. The only
comment from Trump on the matter for much of the day came in a brief
statement via spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who said Tuesday that
the president believes his son is "a high-quality person."
On Wednesday morning,
Trump tweeted that his son was "open, transparent and innocent," again
referring to the investigation as "the greatest Witch Hunt in political
history." The president also questioned the sources of the media
reporting on the story.
The bombshell
revelation that Trump Jr. was eager to accept information from the
Russian government landed hard on weary White House aides. While staff
people have grown accustomed to a good news cycle being overshadowed by
the Russia investigations, Trump aides and outside advisers privately
acknowledged that this week's developments felt more serious.
Trump
Jr. released four pages of emails Tuesday in which he communicates with
an associate trying to arrange a meeting with a Russian lawyer. In the
emails, the intermediary says the attorney has negative information
about Democrat Hillary Clinton that is part of the Russian government's
efforts to help Trump in the campaign. The then-candidate's son
responds: "I love it."
This new setback raises
new questions about whether the Trump campaign coordinated with Moscow
during the election, a charge the president has denied for months. And
it points those questions more directly at the inner circle of Trump's
own family.
As has been the pattern for
Trump's White House, the controversy has sparked a new round of
recriminations among the president's team. Nearly a dozen White House
officials and outside advisers spoke on the condition of anonymity in
order to discuss the mood in the West Wing.
The
president, in conversations with confidants, has questioned the quality
of advice he has received from senior staff, including chief of staff
Reince Priebus. However, Priebus has been a frequent target of criticism
for months and even those taking aim at him now said it did not appear
as though a shakeup was on the horizon.
There
has also been a difference of opinion within the West Wing has to how to
handle the crisis, with some aides favoring more transparency than
others. Some of the unhappiness centers on Trump's legal team, which is
led by New York attorney Marc Kasowitz.
An
unusual statement Saturday night from the legal team's spokesman Mark
Corallo appeared to claim Trump Jr., Kushner and Manafort were duped
into meeting with the Russian lawyer, and was viewed as particularly
unhelpful by senior White House officials.
The
revelations come at a pivotal moment for Trump and the Republican
Party, as GOP senators race to finish work on a health care overhaul
that has divided the party. Trump has largely stayed on the sidelines of
the policy negotiations on the measure, but has still publicly pressed
GOP senators to wrap up work on legislation this summer and fulfill one
of the party's central promises to voters.
On Capitol Hill, some Republican lawmakers cast the snowballing Russia controversy as a distraction from the health care debate.
"We
ought to be disciplined and not be distracted by things that may be
legitimate but not right now in our lane," said Sen. Thom Tillis of
North Carolina.
The matter has also distracted from a brief stretch in which some White House advisers believed they were finding their footing.
Trump
aides, who view clashes with the media as central to the president's
agenda, were emboldened when three journalists from CNN resigned after
the network withdrew a story about a Trump ally. Trump's allies were
also heartened by his trip to Europe last week, feeling that his speech
saluting national pride in Poland was a high point of his presidency and
believing that he held his own during meetings with foreign leaders at
an international summit in Germany.
But the
afterglow of Trump's trip quickly vanished, replaced once again with
questions about the swirling federal and congressional investigations
into Russia's election meddling.
And Trump
allies took notice Tuesday when Vice President Mike Pence distanced
himself from the revelation by the president's son. In a statement,
Pence spokesman Marc Lotter said the vice president "was not aware of
the meeting," adding Pence was "not focused on stories about the
campaign especially those pertaining to the time before he joined the
campaign."
Pence was named Trump's running mate in the middle of July 2016, several weeks after the meeting involving the president's son.
Trump
Jr, who is running the family business with his brother, huddled with
friends and close business associates after the first stories dropped,
his mood shifting from worry to defiance over the story's lifespan,
according to confidants. He has told those close to him that while he
realizes the optics of the meeting aren't ideal, he has echoed his
father in believing that the media have overblown the matter and,
despite some opposition among his allies, has said he wants to publicly
fight back.
But White House aides struggled
with bringing forth a strong defense against the scandal that also
touched Jared Kushner, the president's son-in-law and senior adviser who
attended the 2016 meeting. Though Sanders called charges of collusion
"ridiculous," the White House press briefing remained off-camera for the
second consecutive day, limiting the power of her pushback.
And
the president himself was slated to stay out of sight. He had no public
events scheduled for Wednesday until he departs for another overseas
trip, this time to France.
The
story has been corrected to reflect a reference to the singular lawyer
instead of lawyers in the 9th paragraph, which begins ' ... An
unusual...
Lemire reported from New York.
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