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Former presidential adviser and Apprentice contestant, Omarosa Manigault Newman released another audio recording of a conversation about her termination from the White House — this time apparently with U.S. President Donald Trump.

During the recording, which was aired exclusively on NBC’s Today Show Monday morning, Trump appears to be surprised that she had been dismissed by Chief of Staff John Kelly and can be heard saying: “Nobody even told me about it.”

Manigault Newman said she recorded the phone call with Trump a day after she was fired by Kelly in December 2017.

The president took to Twitter Monday morning, criticizing Omarosa, saying: “Wacky Omarosa, who got fired 3 times on the Apprentice, now got fired for the last time. She never made it, never will. She begged me for a job, tears in her eyes. I said Ok. People in the White House hated her. She was vicious, but not smart.”

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He then tweeted: “While I know it’s “not presidential” to take on a lowlife like Omarosa, and while I would rather not be doing so, this is a modern day form of communication and I know the Fake News Media will be working overtime to make even Wacky Omarosa look legitimate as possible. Sorry!”

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What was heard on the call
In the phone call, Trump is first heard saying: “Omarosa what’s going on? I just saw on the news that you’re thinking about leaving? What happened?” Trump is heard saying on the tape.

“General Kelly came to me and said that you guys wanted me to leave,” Manigault Newman said.

“No…I, I. Nobody even told me about it,” Trump replied.

Manigault Newman then says, “Wow,” before Trump is heard saying: “You know they run a big operation, but I didn’t know it. I didn’t know that. Goddamn it. I don’t love you leaving at all.”

NBC News said it does not know what was heard before or after the exchange between the two.

While the latest recording appears to show Trump was unaware of the firing, Manigault Newman said on Today that Trump may have instructed Kelly to do it, but she offered no evidence.

Manigault Newman also secretly record Kelly firing her
The recording comes a day after the reality television star revealed she also recorded Kelly firing her inside the high-security White House Situation Room.

Parts of her of the recordings were aired on NBC’s Meet the Press on Sunday as Manigault Newman promoted her new book, Unhinged.

She was harshly criticized by Trump aides and national security experts for the secret recordings saying it was a serious breach of ethics and security.

In a statement, press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said: “The very idea a staff member would sneak a recording device into the White House Situation Room, shows a blatant disregard for our national security.”

Manigault Newman defended the recordings saying she had to protect herself and has “no regrets about it.”

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the latest recording.

— With files from the Associated Press
 
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Former White House aide Omarosa Manigault-Newman questioned President Trump's physical and mental fitness in a forthcoming book about her time at The White House and claimed that he is "just this side of functionally illiterate."

In her tell-all "Unhinged," Manigault-Newman writes: "I'd come to understand that [Trump] read at an eighth- or ninth-grade level. That's fine for some, but for the leader of the free world?"

Manigault-Newman goes on to claim that the 72-year-old Trump, whom she refers to as "Donald" throughout the book, "has only a surface-level understanding of the content he's signing into law" and adds "Donald has always relied on his charisma, his street smarts, and trusted advisers to tell him what was in the paperwork."

The White House has denounced the book, with Press Secretary Sarah Sanders calling it "riddled with lies and false accusations Friday." On Monday, Trump called Omarosa "wacky" and a "lowlife" on Twitter, adding: "People in the White House hated her. She was vicious, but not smart. I would rarely see her but heard really bad things."

"Unhinged", which is due to be released Tuesday, documents Manigault-Newman's 15-year-long working relationship with Trump -- beginning with her infamous stint on the first season of the NBC reality show "The Apprentice" and continuing through her dismissal by White House Chief of Staff John Kelly in December 2017.



Over that period, Manigault-Newman claims to have noticed a pronounced deterioration in Trump's physical and mental health. She singles out the president's now-famous interview with NBC News' Lester Holt after firing FBI Director James Comey in May 2017 -- a decision she says "not a single person in the White House" agreed with -- as a moment when "his mental decline could not be denied."

"I'd known Donald to exaggerate and boast," Manigault-Newman writes. "He'd told white lies and lies of omission, ignorance, or misunderstanding. ... But this was different. It was like he didn't know what the truth was or couldn't remember what he'd previously stated as truth."

In that interview, Trump told Holt that he "was going to fire Comey" regardless of whether Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein recommended he do so. Manigault-Newman writes that White House communications aide Hope Hicks had told Trump "a dozen times" to highlight Rosenstein's recommendation that the president dismiss Comey.

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"When I decided to just do it, I said to myself, 'You know, this Russia thing with Trump and Russia is a made-up story,'" Trump said at the time.

Manigault-Newman writes that she discussed her concerns about Trump's mental state with Lara Trump, the president's daughter-in-law, as well as "several high-level people in the White House" who "shut me down quickly and decisively, with warnings."

Manigault-Newman elaborated on her claims about Trump's mental agility in an interview on PBS' "Newshour" Monday night.

"Our boardrooms on 'The Apprentice' would be four, five hours long and Donald Trump was sharp. He was very perceptive. He was engaging. He had this expansive vocabulary and he very seldom took breaks," she told host Judy Woodruff. "Fast-forward to 2017 and we're in the White House and Donald Trump couldn't remember basic words or phrases."

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Former White House physician Dr. Ronny Jackson. (AP, File)

When Woodruff asked Manigault-Newman how she knew of Trump's condition, the former White House aide answered: "Because I was in the room."

Manigault-Newman also asserts her belief that Trump "is clearly obese" and his "terrible health habits have caught up with him." Manigault-Newman specifically cites Trump's "addiction to Big Macs and fried chicken [and] daily tanning bed sessions."

On one occasion, Manigault-Newman tried to sneak an article about a study linking Diet Coke -- of which she says the president consumes "eight cans a day, at least" -- with dementia and stroke risk into Trump's briefing folder. In response, then-White House staff secretary Rob Porter told her: "Stop putting articles in the president's folder. You have to go through me first. Don't do it again."

In January of this year, White House physician Ronny Jackson proclaimed that Trump was in "excellent" overall health and said he had "absolutely no concerns about the president’s cognitive ability or his neurological function."

In her book, Manigault-Newman dismisses Jackson's diagnosis, writing that Jackson's "job depended on Trump's approval of him" and claiming that "his loyalty was rewarded" when Trump nominated Jackson as Secretary of Veterans Affairs. Jackson later withdrew his nomination after being accused of unprofessional behavior.

Fox News' Brooke Singman contributed to this report.
 
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Washington (CNN) President Donald Trump appeared to be unaware that Omarosa Manigault Newman was fired by White House chief of staff John Kelly, according to an audio recording of a phone conversation aired on NBC's "Today" Monday morning.

"Omarosa, what's going on? I just saw in the news you're thinking about leaving. What happened?" Trump is heard asking.
Manigault Newman, who was fired from her White House job last December replied, saying, "General Kelly -- General Kelly came to me and said that you guys wanted me to leave."
"No. Nobody even told me about it," the President replied. "You know, they run a big operation but I didn't know it. I didn't know that. Damn it, I don't love you leaving at all."

NBC News aired the new audio but cautioned that the organization does not know what was said before or after the segment provided.

Trump responded Monday morning on Twitter, saying Omarosa "never made it, never will" and said she was "vicious, but not smart."

"Wacky Omarosa, who got fired 3 times on the Apprentice, now got fired for the last time. She never made it, never will. She begged me for a job, tears in her eyes, I said Ok. People in the White House hated her. She was vicious, but not smart. I would rarely see her but heard....," he tweeted.

"...really bad things. Nasty to people & would constantly miss meetings & work. When Gen. Kelly came on board he told me she was a loser & nothing but problems. I told him to try working it out, if possible, because she only said GREAT things about me - until she got fired!" Trump continued on Twitter.

Omarosa's comments on Monday morning add to a series of shifting explanations for the circumstances surrounding her firing.
Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press," Manigault Newman said that Trump told her later that he "delegated" her termination.

"Are you convinced he did not know at that minute that you were being fired?" "Meet the Press" host Chuck Todd asked.

"No, I know he knows," Manigault Newman replied. "Because I've talked to him subsequently, and he said he delegated. 'I delegated.' So, he knew. He knew that John Kelly was going to take me into the Situation Room, and lock me in there, threaten me, and say that things were going to get ugly for me, and there would be damage to my reputation."

After "Today" aired the new audio on Monday, Manigault Newman was asked if the President was lying about whether he knew about her termination.

"He probably instructed General Kelly to do it so that he could keep his hands clean when he spoke to me," she replied. "I'm wondering, is he sincere? The other question is, is General Kelly running this country or is the President running this country?"

The audio was released as Manigault Newman gears up for the release of her new book, "Unhinged: An Insider Account of the Trump White House," which contains several unflattering claims against the President and his staff. Omarosa claims to have multiple recordings of her time in the White House, but many of the claims she has made are unverifiable.

Early excerpts of her book have been denounced by White House officials, and the President this weekend called Manigault Newman a "low life."

CNN's Jeremy Diamond contributed to this report.
 
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(CNN) We've entered a new plane of reality where the question of who secretly recorded President Donald Trump doing what without his knowledge has become an overriding theme of his presidency.

Release of secret tapes almost derailed his presidential campaign. Trump's obsession with the unfounded idea he was being wiretapped by former President Barack Obama, and his concern about rumors he was secretly videotaped by the Russians, now feed strangely into the development that he *actually* was secretly recorded by his lawyer and at least one aide.

And perhaps more incredible than the idea that heads of state would try to spy on each other is that the Trump era is indisputably a time in which a fix-it man dispatched to deal with alleged illicit affairs and a political staffer, both armed with iPhones, hit record while talking to their boss, who now happens to be the US President.

No wonder Trump wanted to be alone with Russian President Vladimir Putin. He'd actually have a legitimate concern his own staff might be surreptitiously recording him. Transcripts of his phone calls with other world leaders once leaked to the press and showed him admitting that Mexico would not pay for a border wall, despite what he said in public.

Michael Cohen and Omarosa Manigault Newman, in putting Trump on tape, were seeking proof not unlike the "Kompromat" Russian agents allegedly try to get over foreigners. It's a strange inverse of the Nixon White House, where everything was recorded and subpoenaed and the gaps of recording helped bring the President down.

In Trump's White House, personal cell phones have been banned in the West Wing since January and staffers either leave them in their cars or check them into lockers.

Cohen's secret recording of the President, made before the election in 2016, was given to CNN by his attorney as Cohen faces possible legal issues about payments by a media company to a Playboy model and by himself to a porn star who were alleged to have affairs with Trump before he was President.

Manigault Newman's secret recording emerged as part of her current book tour.

One of the more persistent paranoias Trump has put forth repeatedly on Twitter is that his phone calls were secretly recorded by former President Obama.

There's never been any evidence for that charge, although it's clear the FBI had ears on his campaign chairman for unrelated extracurricular activities with foreign governments.

When Trump said on Twitter there might be secret tapes of his conversations with James Comey, it seemed like a joke or a troll.
"James Comey better hope that there are no 'tapes' of our conversations before he starts leaking to the press!" Trump said on Twitter in May of 2017.

It still commanded days of media coverage until the White House was forced to admit there actually probably weren't any tapes, and it also enabled Comey to bring the word "lordy" into common usage for a while.

"Lordy, I hope there are tapes," Comey testified under oath.

And tapes there are. Tapes and tapes. Just not of Trump and Comey. It's altogether unclear what else could spring from the secret archives of Cohen or Manigault Newman, who said she needed the insurance of secret recordings, despite the serious security implications.

"This is a White House where everybody lies," she told NBC News.

It's certainly true there are often different versions of the same event. Like when Trump besmirched Haiti and countries in Africa, aggravating lawmakers and jeopardizing immigration legislation. It can be hard to know exactly what Trump said, especially without a tape to back it up.

That's how Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin found himself giving press conferences and asking DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen under oath if Trump did in fact use the word "shithole" to refer to those countries.

And sometimes, even with a tape, Trump will raise questions, like when he denied that recordings of him impersonating his own publicist to talk himself up to reporters sounded like him.

There are tapes of the President boasting of assaulting women, which were not enough to derail his campaign.

Tom Arnold, who has long claimed there are tapes of Trump saying horrible things in outtakes of his time on "The Apprentice" and has enough material and innuendo about those tapes to create a mystery-style TV show "The Hunt for the Trump Tapes." It premieres next month.

At this rate it should surprise no one if we hear some new secretly recorded tapes of the President before then.
 
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Celebrating the signing of the 2019 military authorization funding bill at Fort Drum in upstate New York on Monday, President Donald Trump New York made no mention of the man whose name is attached to the legislation: John McCain.

The John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019 was named in honor of the longtime Arizona senator and former prisoner of war who is chair of the Senate Armed Service Committee and currently battling brain cancer.

"I’m humbled that my colleagues in Congress chose to designate this bill in my name," McCain said in a statement from his home in Arizona where he is receiving care released soon after the bill was signed into law.

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Sen. John McCain speaks during a hearing in Washington, D.C., Nov. 30, 2017.

"Serving as Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee and working on behalf of America's brave service members has been one of the greatest honors of my life," he said. "Through the committee’s work, I’ve been privileged to support our men and women in uniform who have dedicated their lives to that noble cause.”

In June, at the signing ceremony of the “VA MISSION Act of 2018," another bill bearing McCain's name, Trump never mentioned McCain by name. Instead he praised multiple members of Congress who were at the White House for the signing.

The 2019 defense authorization bill provides $717 billion to the military, which Trump touted as the "most significant investment in the military in modern history." But it also notably advances many of McCain's policy priorities, including tough language on Russia.

The president Trump specifically highlighted a 2.6 percent raise for military personnel authorized in the bill, telling the Army's 10th Mountain Division - one of the most-deployed divisions of the Army to Iraq and Afghanistan since 9/11 - that "we think our war-fighters deserve the equipment … they have earned with their blood, sweat and tears."

Aside from policy differences, the president has a long-running personal feud with McCain going back to the presidential campaign, when then-candidate Trump said McCain’s five years as a prisoner of war during the Vietnam War don’t qualify him to be called a “war hero.”



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Carolyn Kaster/AP
President Donald Trump listens during a meeting with state leaders about prison reform, Aug. 9, 2018, at Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, N.J.

"He's not a war hero. He's a war hero because he was captured. I like people that weren't captured,” Trump famously said of McCain back in 2015.

Their rocky relationship hit a low point when McCain withdrew his support of Trump as the party's nominee following the release of the "Access Hollywood" tape in October.

"When Mr. Trump attacks women and demeans the women in our nation and in our society, that is a point where I just have to part company," McCain said of his decision to drop his support of Trump.

Trump fired back at McCain, calling him “very foul mouthed” on Twitter.

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More recently, Trump continues to fume openly about McCain’s vote against the Republican plan to repeal of President Obama’s hallmark Affordable Care Act. Trump will frequently blame “one guy” for tanking the GOP’s effort during stump speeches.

“I had Obamacare done except one guy at 2 o'clock in the morning went in and said, he went thumbs down, even though he campaigned for years repeal and replace,” the president said to the boos of the crowd earlier this month during a rally in Pennsylvania.

In reality, three Republican senators voted against the GOP repeal bill. McCain was joined by Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski.

"He's not a war hero. He's a war hero because he was captured. I like people that weren't captured,” Trump famously said of McCain back in 2015.

Their rocky relationship hit a low point when McCain withdrew his support of Trump as the party's nominee following the release of the "Access Hollywood" tape in October.

"When Mr. Trump attacks women and demeans the women in our nation and in our society, that is a point where I just have to part company," McCain said of his decision to drop his support of Trump.

Trump fired back at McCain, calling him “very foul mouthed” on Twitter.
 
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(CNN) President Donald Trump thanked multiple members of Congress involved in passing the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act at a signing ceremony at Fort Drum, New York, Monday, with one major exception: the senator for whom the bill is named.

"We would not be here for today's signing ceremony without the dedicated efforts without the dedicated members of Congress who worked so hard to pass the National Defense Authorization Act," Trump said, namechecking Republican members of Congress including Rep. Elise Stefanik, who spoke briefly and represents the district containing Fort Drum, as well as Don Bacon, Dan Donovan, Joe Wilson and Martha McSally.

Trump, who did not serve in the military himself, has previously attacked McCain's record of service, saying the Vietnam veteran and former prisoner of war is "not a war hero" because he was captured.

"He is not a war hero," Trump told pollster Frank Luntz, who was hosting a July 2015 question-and-answer session at the Family Leadership Summit in Ames, Iowa.

"He is a war hero," Luntz interjected.

"He is a war hero because he was captured?" Trump said, cutting him off. "I like people that weren't captured, OK? I hate to tell you. He is a war hero because he was captured. OK, you can have -- I believe perhaps he is a war hero."

Trump has since acknowledged that McCain is a hero, but refused to apologize in subsequent interviews.

McCain has been one of the administration's most outspoken Republican critics.

The President hasn't backed down on his attacks on McCain, who was diagnosed with glioblastoma, a rare brain cancer, over a year ago. Trump has referenced McCain several times on the campaign trail over the past months without directly naming him, hitting the Arizona senator for his health care vote.

Just hours after the signing ceremony, Trump continued the criticism at a campaign event for Rep. Claudia Tenney in Utica, New York.

"One of our wonderful senators said 'thumbs down' at two o'clock in the morning," he said.

Although Trump claimed the Senate was one vote away, in reality, the vote was only to go to conference with the House on the Senate's "skinny repeal."

John McCain, who is the Senate Armed Services Committee chairman, spearheaded efforts to pass the defense spending bill in the Senate.

McCain's daughter, conservative commentator Meghan McCain, called Trump's comments "gross and pathetic."

John McCain, who is the Senate Armed Services Committee chairman, spearheaded efforts to pass the defense spending bill in the Senate.

"I am particularly humbled that my colleagues chose to designate legislation of such importance in my name. Serving on the Senate Armed Services Committee has been an incredibly meaningful experience since my first days on Capitol Hill," McCain said in a press release when the bill was passed earlier this month.

The bill's formal name is the "John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019," and it is listed on the White House daily guidance as such, but Trump simply called it the "National Defense Authorization Act" at Fort Drum.

In mostly scripted remarks Monday, Trump called the measure "the most significant investment in our military in our war fighters in modern history," saying he was "very proud to be a big, big part of it."

He also touted the $716 billion in forthcoming 2019 fiscal year military funding, his administration's economic success, and the United States' "leadership in space."
 
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(CNN) We've entered a new plane of reality where the question of who secretly recorded President Donald Trump doing what without his knowledge has become an overriding theme of his presidency.

Release of secret tapes almost derailed his presidential campaign. Trump's obsession with the unfounded idea he was being wiretapped by former President Barack Obama, and his concern about rumors he was secretly videotaped by the Russians, now feed strangely into the development that he *actually* was secretly recorded by his lawyer and at least one aide.

And perhaps more incredible than the idea that heads of state would try to spy on each other is that the Trump era is indisputably a time in which a fix-it man dispatched to deal with alleged illicit affairs and a political staffer, both armed with iPhones, hit record while talking to their boss, who now happens to be the US President.

No wonder Trump wanted to be alone with Russian President Vladimir Putin. He'd actually have a legitimate concern his own staff might be surreptitiously recording him. Transcripts of his phone calls with other world leaders once leaked to the press and showed him admitting that Mexico would not pay for a border wall, despite what he said in public.

Michael Cohen and Omarosa Manigault Newman, in putting Trump on tape, were seeking proof not unlike the "Kompromat" Russian agents allegedly try to get over foreigners. It's a strange inverse of the Nixon White House, where everything was recorded and subpoenaed and the gaps of recording helped bring the President down.

In Trump's White House, personal cell phones have been banned in the West Wing since January and staffers either leave them in their cars or check them into lockers.

Cohen's secret recording of the President, made before the election in 2016, was given to CNN by his attorney as Cohen faces possible legal issues about payments by a media company to a Playboy model and by himself to a porn star who were alleged to have affairs with Trump before he was President.

Manigault Newman's secret recording emerged as part of her current book tour.

One of the more persistent paranoias Trump has put forth repeatedly on Twitter is that his phone calls were secretly recorded by former President Obama.

There's never been any evidence for that charge, although it's clear the FBI had ears on his campaign chairman for unrelated extracurricular activities with foreign governments.

When Trump said on Twitter there might be secret tapes of his conversations with James Comey, it seemed like a joke or a troll.
"James Comey better hope that there are no 'tapes' of our conversations before he starts leaking to the press!" Trump said on Twitter in May of 2017.

It still commanded days of media coverage until the White House was forced to admit there actually probably weren't any tapes, and it also enabled Comey to bring the word "lordy" into common usage for a while.

"Lordy, I hope there are tapes," Comey testified under oath.

And tapes there are. Tapes and tapes. Just not of Trump and Comey. It's altogether unclear what else could spring from the secret archives of Cohen or Manigault Newman, who said she needed the insurance of secret recordings, despite the serious security implications.

"This is a White House where everybody lies," she told NBC News.

It's certainly true there are often different versions of the same event. Like when Trump besmirched Haiti and countries in Africa, aggravating lawmakers and jeopardizing immigration legislation. It can be hard to know exactly what Trump said, especially without a tape to back it up.

That's how Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin found himself giving press conferences and asking DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen under oath if Trump did in fact use the word "shithole" to refer to those countries.

And sometimes, even with a tape, Trump will raise questions, like when he denied that recordings of him impersonating his own publicist to talk himself up to reporters sounded like him.

There are tapes of the President boasting of assaulting women, which were not enough to derail his campaign.

Tom Arnold, who has long claimed there are tapes of Trump saying horrible things in outtakes of his time on "The Apprentice" and has enough material and innuendo about those tapes to create a mystery-style TV show "The Hunt for the Trump Tapes." It premieres next month.

At this rate it should surprise no one if we hear some new secretly recorded tapes of the President before then.
为了证明没有N word tape,trump又推了,说Apprentice的制片人刚给他打电话(一般来说应该发表个声明),“没有。。。”,trump版的此地无银三百两。

而且自夸“true champion of civil rights”,这脸皮得有多厚啊[emoji54]!
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Campaign finance records show several former aides to President Donald Trump have received payments of roughly $15,000 per month from campaign or party accounts, bolstering part of former aide Omarosa Manigault Newman’s claim that she was offered the same amount to keep quiet about her time in the White House.

The Apprentice contestant turned White House aide Manigault Newman has alleged that multiple former Trump Administration aides have been taking money for their silence since leaving their posts, a hush money payment under the guise of a no-show job that she says she turned down.

"They were not offering me a real job," Manigault Newman told NBC on Sunday. “They didn't really care if I showed up. In fact, there are several former employees from the White House who actually signed this agreement, who are all being paid $15,000 for their silence.”

Federal election filings reviewed by ABC News support her allegations that payments were made but do not indicate whether the payments were contingent on signing some kind of nondisclosure agreement.

All Trump campaign staffers were required to sign a nondisclosure agreement upon joining the campaign. After Trump took office, some White House staffers signed similar agreements, but it is unclear how enforceable such agreements would be for government employees.

A number of former Trump aides – including two who served in sensitive positions in the White House – have been paid roughly $15,000 per month by either the Trump campaign, the Republican National Committee or America First PAC, a political action committee dedicated to Trump’s re-election for various services described only briefly in filings.


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Drew Angerer/Getty Images, FILE
Then Director of Communications for the White House Public Liaison Office Omarosa Manigault Newman listens during the daily press briefing at the White House, Oct. 27, 2017, in Washington, DC.

Campaign or party coffers made monthly payments to former director of Oval Office operations Keith Schiller for “security services,” former personal assistant to the president John McEntee for “payroll,” former digital media director of the Trump campaign Brad Parscale for “digital consulting [and] management consulting” and former director of advertising for the Trump campaign Gary Coby for “media services [and] consulting.”

Neither the White House nor the Trump campaign has directly addressed the hush-money claim, but White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders broadly called Manigault Newman, who is currently promoting her forthcoming book, a disgruntled ex-employee who was spreading “lies and false accusations.”

One of Sanders’ predecessors behind the podium, however, did address the accusations and was similarly forceful in his denial. Manigault Newman alleged that Trump’s former press secretary Sean Spicer signed a non-disclosure agreement similar to the one she was offered, which Manigault Newman says would have prohibited her from making any comments that could damage the president.

"Which is why Sean Spicer described Donald Trump as a unicorn jumping over rainbows,” Manigault Newman told NBC News. “It’s because he signed this same agreement."

Spicer called her claims "completely fictional," telling ABC News that he did not sign a non-disclosure agreement and called her assertion that he was paid hush money "false." There are no listings in federal election reports showing payments to Sean Spicer or RigWill LLC, his communications consulting firm.

Records show a number of payments to former Trump aides – or firms owned and operated by former Trump aides – who have been tied to some of the recent scandals plaguing the White House.

The RNC has been paying KS Global Group, Schiller’s private security firm, $15,000 per month since Schiller left government in October of 2017, according to the records. Schiller, the longtime Trump security adviser, was interviewed by congressional investigators as part of their ongoing probe into Russian efforts to interfere in the 2016 elections, where he answered questions about Trump’s now infamous 2013 trip to Moscow.

The RNC has said the payments were for Schiller’s help in preparing for the 2020 national political convention, but Schiller could not be reached for comment.


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Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images, FILE
Director of Oval Office operations Keith Schiller attends the signing ceremony for the Department of Veterans Affairs Accountability and Whistleblower Protection Act of 2017, June 23, 2017.

The Trump campaign has been paying McEntee about $14,000 per month since he left the White House in March over what sources said were “issues with his security clearance.” McEntee, who shadowed the president during much of his first term as Trump’s “body man,” was hired by the campaign within hours of being escorted from the White House.

McEntee declined to comment, but sources familiar with his role say he was working on voter engagement, surrogate messaging and campaign event planning but recently told campaign officials he intends to leave his job at the end of this month.

America First PAC, the political action committee backing Trump, and the RNC have paid Parscale, the former head of the 2016 campaign’s digital media outreach effort, who is now the campaign manager for Trump’s nascent reelection bid, in 15 separate payments of $15,000 from March 2017 to June 2018.

The RNC also made monthly $15,000 payments between mid-2017 and mid-2018, amid several other sizabale payments, to Direct Persuasion, a consulting firm owned by Gary Coby, a former RNC digital specialist who helped manage online advertising during the 2016 campaign.

The social media outreach efforts that Parscale and Coby worked on have since become a focus of the ongoing special counsel and congressional investigations into Russian interference in the 2016 elections.

A campaign official said the payments to Parscale were not related to a “hush agreement” and were for “services rendered” but would not elaborate on what those services were. Parscale, like many other campaign officials, signed a non-disclosure agreement.

Coby declined to comment, but a source familiar with Coby’s work at the RNC were for actual digital advertising advice, not for his silence.
 
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The Latest on President Donald Trump and the revoking of security clearances (all times local):

5:40 p.m.

Sixty former CIA officials are joining a chorus of national security professionals denouncing President Donald Trump's decision to yank the security clearance of former CIA Director John Brennan, one of the president's harshest critics.

Trump says he pulled Brennan's clearance because he had to do "something" about the "rigged" federal probe of Russian election interference. Trump says he expects to soon revoke the security clearance for a Justice Department official whose wife worked for a firm involved in producing a dossier on Trump's ties to Russia.

Fifteen former top-ranking intelligence officials already have expressed strong opposition to Trump's move.

On Friday, 60 former CIA officials joined them, saying former government officials have a right to express their views on national security issues without fear of being punished.

——

11:10 a.m.

President Donald Trump says he expects to "quickly" revoke the security clearance for the Justice Department official whose wife worked for the firm involved in producing the dossier on Trump's ties to Russia.

Trump says the official, Bruce Ohr, is a "disgrace."

Asked about Ohr's security clearance, Trump said: "I suspect I'll be taking it away very quickly. For him to be in the Justice Department and doing what he did, that is a disgrace."

Ohr has come under Republican scrutiny for his contacts to Glenn Simpson, co-founder of Fusion GPS. The opposition research firm hired former British spy Christopher Steele during the 2016 presidential campaign to compile the dossier.

Ohr's wife, Nellie, worked for Fusion GPS during the campaign — something Trump has tweeted about to highlight his assertions of political bias behind the Russia investigation.

———

12:15 a.m.

Former U.S. security officials issued scathing rebukes to President Donald Trump on Thursday, admonishing him for yanking former CIA chief John Brennan's security clearance in what they cast as an act of political vengeance.

Trump said he'd had to do "something" about the "rigged" federal probe of Russian election interference.

Trump's admission that he acted out of frustration about the Russia probe underscored his willingness to use his executive power to fight back against an investigation he sees as a threat to his presidency. Legal experts said the dispute may add to the evidence being reviewed by special counsel Robert Mueller.
 
https://www.usatoday.com/story/opin...ection-check-balance-trump-column/1008922002/

Congress is letting Trump be Trump. The Founders would want voters to fix that this fall.
Kenneth C. Brill, Opinion contributor Published 5:00 a.m. ET Aug. 18, 2018 | Updated 1:07 p.m. ET Aug. 18, 2018

The Founders envisioned a president like Trump. They'd want voters to elect a new Congress to check executive power and act in the national interest.

The Founding Fathers anticipated a president like Donald Trump when they wrote the Constitution. That is not to say they anticipated a president who would cancel national security clearances to deter critics, publicly side with a Russian despot against agencies of his own government, undermine America’s global leadership by attacking its allies and the institutions that leverage American power, repeatedly and demonstrably lie in his public statements and regularly attack the free press and its role in America’s democracy.

The framers of the Constitution did not anticipate Trump’s specific actions, but they understood that those who hold power could misuse it. Accordingly, the Constitution established a system of checks and balances in which the legislative, executive and judicial branches of government each had powers reserved to it that the other branches did not. The executive branch was relatively strong, but there were deliberate checks on presidential authority, domestically and internationally, in the powers the Constitution assigned to the Congress.

Congress no longer providing oversight
Unfortunately, it is fair to say the current Congress has largely abdicated its constitutional responsibilities to provide oversight and guidance to Trump and his administration. This is obvious with regard to foreign policy and trade policy. In previous decades, Republican and Democratic chairmen have led the Senate Foreign Relations and Senate Finance Committees to conduct substantive reviews of the foreign and trade policies of presidential administrations of both parties — and to pass legislation that directed what administrations could and could not do. An example of this was the Senate committee's years-long impact on the Johnson administration’s Vietnam policies, under the leadership of Democratic chairman J. William Fulbright of Arkansas.

In contrast, this Congress has held no comprehensive hearings on Trump’s policies towards NATO, North Korea, Russia, the European Union or China, despite controversies regarding administration actions in all these areas. The Senate Finance Committee has held limited hearings on Trump’s trade policies, but has not produced legislation to affect administration policy, such as the widely reviled tariffs. And it has been the free press, playing the role the Founding Fathers intended, that has provided the most effective oversight of those Trump administration officials who resigned for scandals involving the misuse of public funds.

Sadly, the most active area of congressional oversight has been by Republicans in the so-called “Freedom Caucus” who have attacked the Justice Department’s management of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential elections. The “Freedom Caucus” has consistently prioritized protecting Trump over the nation’s interest in protecting the fundamental Constitutional right to elections free of foreign interference.

The Founding Fathers also anticipated the problem of excess partisanship in government. James Madison warned about the dangers of “factions” (what we now call political parties), noting they could act to advance narrow rather than national interests. Another current example of this is the Republican leadership in the House and Senate generally allows votes on legislation only if a majority of Republicans support it, not if a majority of all legislators support it. As a result, the Congress is stymied on issues polls show the public wants action on, such as immigration reform, but on which Republicans cannot agree.

Madison and Alexander Hamilton argued that the size of the new American republic would blunt the danger of factions, but not alleviate it. Ultimately, Madison noted, popular elections would correct problems caused by excess partisanship.

Mid-course midterms correction needed
The congressional elections of 2018 are a timely way for voters to make a course correction in American governance that the Founding Fathers would approve. Voters in the 2018 elections must support congressional candidates who pledge to hold Trump and his administration accountable, but who also commit to working across partisan lines to produce practical approaches to the challenges facing the country. Candidates who are uncritical of Trump and his administration and those who are hyper partisan for either party do not meet the Founding Fathers’ test, do not deserve support and should not be elected.

James Madison argued that the new Constitution was necessary because “[e]nlightened statesmen will not always be at the helm.” Trump fulfilled that prediction, which makes the 2018 elections among the most important in the nation’s history. In 2018, voters must demonstrate their commitment to the American way of constitutional governance and elect people who will make the Congress once again what the Founding Fathers intended: a check on the misuse of presidential power and forum where national, not partisan, interests prevail.

Kenneth C. Brill was a career diplomat who served as an ambassador in the Clinton and Bush administrations and a senior intelligence official in the Obama administration.
 
Trump: Bob Mueller is 'looking for trouble'
Pete Kasperowicz
8 hrs ago
BBManyL.img
© REUTERS/Yuri Gripas U.S. President Donald Trump walks on the South Lawn of the White House upon his return from Bedminster, New Jersey, to Washington, U.S., August 19, 2018.
President Trump on Monday accused special counsel Robert Mueller of "ruining people's lives" by looking for evidence of Trump's collusion with Russia where there is none.

In a few tweets, Trump said Mueller spent more than 30 hours with White House counsel Don McGahn and got nothing, which shows Mueller is only interested in hindering the Trump administration.

"Anybody needed that much time when they know there is no Russian Collusion is just someone looking for trouble," Trump said over two tweets.

"They are enjoying ruining people's lives and REFUSE to look at the real corruption on the Democrat side - the lies, the firings, the deleted Emails and soooo much more!" Trump wrote. "Mueller's Angry Dems are looking to impact the election. They are a National Disgrace!"

Trump has continued to put pressure on Mueller to end his investigation by next month, and has argued that continuing it beyond that would be an attempt to influence the 2018 midterm elections.

Trump said over the weekend that he allowed McGahn to meet with Mueller's team in the interest of transparency, amid speculation that McGahn may have provided information to Mueller that might hurt Trump.

"They made up a phony crime called Collusion, and when there was no Collusion they say there was Obstruction (of a phony crime that never existed)," Trump added. "If you FIGHT BACK or say anything bad about the Rigged Witch Hunt, they scream Obstruction!"
 
Trump: Bob Mueller is 'looking for trouble'
Pete Kasperowicz
8 hrs ago
BBManyL.img
© REUTERS/Yuri Gripas U.S. President Donald Trump walks on the South Lawn of the White House upon his return from Bedminster, New Jersey, to Washington, U.S., August 19, 2018.
President Trump on Monday accused special counsel Robert Mueller of "ruining people's lives" by looking for evidence of Trump's collusion with Russia where there is none.

In a few tweets, Trump said Mueller spent more than 30 hours with White House counsel Don McGahn and got nothing, which shows Mueller is only interested in hindering the Trump administration.

"Anybody needed that much time when they know there is no Russian Collusion is just someone looking for trouble," Trump said over two tweets.

"They are enjoying ruining people's lives and REFUSE to look at the real corruption on the Democrat side - the lies, the firings, the deleted Emails and soooo much more!" Trump wrote. "Mueller's Angry Dems are looking to impact the election. They are a National Disgrace!"

Trump has continued to put pressure on Mueller to end his investigation by next month, and has argued that continuing it beyond that would be an attempt to influence the 2018 midterm elections.

Trump said over the weekend that he allowed McGahn to meet with Mueller's team in the interest of transparency, amid speculation that McGahn may have provided information to Mueller that might hurt Trump.

"They made up a phony crime called Collusion, and when there was no Collusion they say there was Obstruction (of a phony crime that never existed)," Trump added. "If you FIGHT BACK or say anything bad about the Rigged Witch Hunt, they scream Obstruction!"
老川不淡定啊。
 
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