
Obama's office rebukes Trump admin's treason claims as ‘distraction'
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Patrick Rodenbush, a spokesperson for Obama, said in a statement that while the office 'does not normally dignify the constant nonsense and misinformation flowing out of this White House with a response,' the administration's new 'bizarre' and 'ridiculous' allegations warranted one.
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'Nothing in the document issued last week undercuts the widely accepted conclusion that Russia worked to influence the 2016 presidential election but did not successfully manipulate any votes. These findings were affirmed in a 2020 report by the bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee, led by then-Chairman Marco Rubio,' Rodenbush wrote, referring to Trump's secretary of state.
Multiple in-depth investigations found that Russia interfered with the 2016 presidential election, largely in an attempt to interfere with US democracy but also in a way that suggested Putin preferred Trump to win.
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The studies and assessments include the years-long bipartisan investigation by the Senate Intelligence Committee, which Rubio signed onto; the probe by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III; and the January 2017 US intelligence community assessment that Trump and his aides are now seeking to undermine.
Earlier Tuesday, Trump said a criminal investigation should move forward as a result of the findings, saying, 'it's time to go after people.' He singled out Obama, whom he said had been 'caught directly.'
'It's Obama. His orders are on the paper. The papers are signed. The papers came right at their office. … What they did in 2016 and in 2020 is very criminal. It's criminal at the highest level,' Trump told reporters.
Gabbard said in a Tuesday interview with Fox News that Obama's office was deflecting.
'There is a long laundry list of facts and intelligence reporting that directly contradict the statement coming from President Obama's office and those who are trying to deflect away from what actually happened,' Gabbard claimed in the interview with the president's daughter-in-law, Lara Trump. '… After Donald Trump was elected, led by President Obama there was an effort to create a document that would serve as a foundation for what would be a years-long coup against President Trump, therefore trying to subvert the will of the American people who sent him to the White House in 2016.'
The documents released by a special team that Gabbard has assembled called the Director's Initiative Group conflated two separate lines of inquiry into Russia's election interference: one having to do with potential cyberattacks by Moscow on U.S. voting machines and other election infrastructure, the other involving social media campaigns and hacking of Democratic campaign documents that were then publicly released.
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Gabbard released documents, including a declassified September 2016 study by spy agencies, that found Russia and foreign adversaries probably would not be able to use cyberattacks against US election infrastructure or manipulate vote totals in any meaningful way.
But the attacks that did take place, according to previous investigations, involved other cyber tools: divisive cyber media campaigns and hacking into computer systems belonging to the campaign of Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and the Democratic National Committee. The hacks were the work of two Russian intelligence agencies, the GRU and the SVR, investigators found.
The statement from Rodenbush also marks a rare public rebuke of the Trump White House from Obama's team.
On Monday, for example, a spokesperson for Obama declined to comment when asked by The Post about a video Trump posted on the social media platform he owns, Truth Social. The video, which appears to have been generated with artificial intelligence, appears to show Obama being pushed to the floor and arrested by FBI agents inside the Oval Office as Trump, seated beside the former president, watches and smiles. As of Tuesday evening, the post had been reshared nearly 12,000 times.
Although it had been rare for there to be so much friction between current and former occupants of the Oval Office, Obama has been a frequent target of Trump's attacks.
Most recently, Trump has suggested that Obama somehow helped write the 'Epstein files' and is mishandling the construction of Obama's presidential library. Obama, for his part, sought to present a contrast to the president without becoming a high-profile spokesman for the Democratic opposition. Last month, Obama suggested Trump has a 'weak attachment to democracy.'
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Los Angeles Times
25 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
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Telling people to stay off social media is not the answer; neither is regulation by hashtag campaign. While Carano's case is certainly reflective of many perils that face us at the moment, the fact that she reached a settlement, including an apparent promise of more work, is not a sign of further deterioration. The fear that our cultural landscape is being attacked by political forces that would strangle the notion of free speech and competing ideologies is real and justified. But in this case, the capitulation came not when Disney and Lucasfilm decided to settle with Carano, but when they fired her in the first place.


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26 minutes ago
- NBC News
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