cbsnews.com
March 21, 2017
The White House is distancing
itself from two former senior members of Donald Trump’s team, amid an FBI
investigation into possible connections between Trump “associates” and Russia.
White House press secretary Sean
Spicer on Monday referred to Trump’s former national security adviser, Michael Flynn,
as a “volunteer of the campaign.” And he said Paul Manafort,
who ran Trump’s campaign for months, “played a very limited role for a very
limited amount of time.”
“And so to start to look at some
individual that was there for a short period of time or, separately,
individuals who really didn’t play any role in the campaign and to suggest that
those are the basis for anything is a bit ridiculous,” he said.
Spicer wrongly claimed that
Manafort was brought onto Trump’s campaign “sometime in June and by the middle
of August he was no longer with the campaign.” In fact, Manafort was hired in
late March as Trump’s convention manager, and was promoted to campaign chairman
in May. He resigned from the campaign’s top post in mid-August, amid an
onslaught of negative press having to do with his past work for foreign
governments, including pro-Russian Ukrainian leaders.
Manafort issued a statement Monday
defending himself against suggestions he played a part in Russia’s efforts to
interfere with the U.S. presidential campaign. He said he had “no role or
involvement” in the cyber hack of the Democratic National Committee and
disclosure of stolen emails.
Flynn, meanwhile, was one of the
president’s closest advisers throughout the campaign and the transition,
frequently traveling on his plane. He was named national security adviser, but
resigned from the White House last month after he was found to have misled
senior members of the administration about his contacts with Russia’s top
diplomat to the U.S.
During a congressional hearing
Monday examining Russian meddling in the 2016 election and possible connections
between Moscow and Trump’s aides, FBI Director James Comey was asked about
various campaign advisers and staffers, including Carter Page,
whom Trump once named as one of his foreign policy advisers. Comey generally
declined to talk about specific staffers.
In a letter to the Senate
intelligence committee, Page, who has emerged as a key figure in the
controversy surrounding Trump associates’ connections to Russia, cast himself
as a regular presence in Trump Tower, where the campaign was headquartered.
“I have frequently dined in Trump
Grill, had lunch in Trump Café, had coffee meetings in the Starbucks at Trump
Tower, attended events and spent many hours in campaign headquarters on the
fifth floor last year,” Page wrote. It is unclear whether that is true. After
the campaign, Trump’s lawyers sent Page at least two cease and desist letters.
Spicer described Carter and other
individuals mentioned during the hearing as “hangers-oner on the campaign.”
“Those people, the greatest amount
of interaction that they had with the campaign was the campaign apparently
sending them a series of cease and desists,” he said.
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