Sunday, 14 May 2017

Former WH official: Obama did not record private meetings


By Jim Acosta and Jennifer Hansler, CNN

(CNN)President Barack Obama did not record private meetings in the White House, a former White House official tells CNN.
"We obviously didn't record private meetings," the former official said. "The Obama White House didn't secretly record private meetings"
James Comey better hope that there are no "tapes" of our conversations before he starts leaking to the press!
The White House press office had a stenographer in meetings with journalists in order to have an independent transcript of the interviews, a common practice, the former official said.
"None of that was hidden," the former official said. "The stenographer sat in interviews with a tape recorder and sometimes even a boom mic -- the same stenographers would tape and transcribe press briefings and gaggles. Journalists who interviewed President Obama would have been familiar with that."
On Friday, President Donald Trump tweeted a warning to former FBI director James Comey, whom he fired earlier in the week, saying he "better hope that there are no 'tapes' of our conversations before he starts leaking to the press."
The President's controversial tweet about Comey and 'tapes' isn't the first time he has leveled remarks on the subject of having private conversations monitored.
In a series of early morning tweets in March, Trump accused Obama of tapping the phones in Trump Tower at the tail end of the election, saying in one message: "Terrible! Just found out that Obama had my 'wires tapped' in Trump Tower just before the victory. Nothing found. This is McCarthyism!"
When asked to clarify Trump's tweet about Comey on Friday afternoon, White House press secretary Sean Spicer said the tweet was "not a threat," but he did not rule out the possibility that the President is taping his calls.
"The President has nothing further to add on that," Spicer said. "The tweet speaks for itself."
Trump also refused to elaborate on the tweet when asked about it in an interview on Fox News.
"That I can't talk about," he said. "I won't talk about that."
"All I want is for Comey to be honest," Trump added. "And I hope he will be. And I'm sure he will be -- I hope."
A source tells CNN that the former FBI director is "not worried about any tapes" of conversations between him and the President.
If Trump is recording his conversations in the Oval Office, he would appear to be the first president to do so since Richard Nixon.

Donald Trump threatened James Comey via Twitter. This is not a test.

By Chris Cillizza, CNN Editor-at-large
Washington (CNN)Just 72 hours after his shocking decision to fire FBI Director James Comey, President Donald Trump took to Twitter to warn Comey not to share the contents of their private conversations.
"James Comey better hope that there are no 'tapes' of our conversations before he starts leaking to the press!," Trump tweeted at 8:26 a.m. ET, the final missive of an active morning for the president that included four other tweets in which he, among other things, said that it was unreasonable to expect his staff to be completely accurate and floated the idea of eliminating the daily press briefing altogether.
James Comey better hope that there are no "tapes" of our conversations before he starts leaking to the press!
Where to begin.
    First, the facts. What we have here is the President of the United States openly threatening the recently-deposed FBI director to stay silent. At issue, primarily, is the claim made by Trump that Comey told him, on three separate occasions, that he was not under investigation. That would represent a major breach of protocol on Comey's part and would raise serious questions about conflicts of interest -- the same sort of questions that led then Attorney General Loretta Lynch to recuse herself from the Clinton email investigation after former President Bill Clinton boarded a plane to talk to her.
    Comey has yet to speak publicly about Trump's claims but his allies, without their names attached, have described the idea that he would have told the President that he wasn't under investigation as "literally farcical," according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.
    Trump seems very interested in keeping Comey silent. Which raises all sorts of questions. Does Trump know Comey knows things that would undercut his assertions about either their conversations, the ongoing Russia investigation or something else? Does Trump really believe the best way to keep Comey quiet is to publicly threaten him? If so, why?
    Then there is the fact that Trump insinuates that he did -- or could -- tape conversations with Comey, giving him a way to prove, theoretically, that he is telling the truth (and Comey isn't) about their conversations.
    The last president who taped his conversations was a guy named Richard Milhous Nixon. (Regular taping of phone calls made by the president has been largely verboten since then; read this amazing piece by Yahoo's Olivier Knox on that.) It didn't end all that well for Nixon if you remember.
    That Trump would invoke the specter of Nixon at the end of this week is truly startling. His dismissal of Comey led to a slew of comparisons to Nixon's firing of special prosecutor Archibald Cox, who had been appointed by Congress to look into the Watergate break-in. Less than 24 hours later, Trump did a surprise photo-op with Henry Kissinger, who served as Nixon's Secretary of State.
    I mean, you can't make this stuff up. Truly.
    It's not clear from the wording of Trump's tweet whether he actually was taping conversations with Comey or simply using the idea of doing so as a sort of Sword of Damocles to hang over the head of the former FBI director. Either way, it's very strange, to say the least.
    It's difficult to see a strategy in all of this. Trump spent Thursday directly contradicting the story his staff had constructed about why Comey was fired. He spent Friday morning insisting that he is so active that his staff can't be expected to know or tell the whole truth in the daily press briefing and threatening the former FBI director into silence.
    While all of Trump's presidency -- the entire 112 days of it -- has had a lurching, zig-zag feel to it, the last 72 hours -- and, especially, the last 24 -- feel even more erratic and unpredictable. Where can Trump possibly go from here?


    SOURCE: edition.cnn.com



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