About a year ago, a reporter asked Donald Trump whether he believes Russia is still targeting U.S. elections. “No,” the president said, shaking his head.
At the time, it touched off yet another Russia-related controversy for the Republican. Trump’s years-long insistence that his own country’s intelligence was wrong about Moscow’s election attack has itself been offensive. But in July 2018, Trump went further, dismissing U.S. intelligence about Russia’s future intentions, too.
Yesterday afternoon, on the White House South Lawn, it happened again.
Q: Mr. President, Robert Mueller said last week that Russia is interfering in U.S. elections right now. Did you raise that with Vladimir Putin yesterday?
TRUMP: You don’t really believe this. Do you believe this?
Q: He said it last week. Did you raise that with President Putin yesterday?
TRUMP: We didn’t talk about that.
Soon after, as part of the same Q&A, a reporter reminded the president, “Mueller said right now, he believes, Russia is interfering with the election.” Trump, referring to last week’s congressional testimony, replied, “Well, I watched Mueller. I’m not sure Mueller knows what’s going on, if you want to know the truth.”
In the next breath, the president lied about the former special counsel’s findings.
Trump has said a lot of strange things over the last 24 hours, but these comments about Russian election interference were among the most important.
In his sworn testimony on Capitol Hill, Mueller, pointing to Vladimir Putin’s 2016 attack, said, “[T]his wasn’t a single attempt. They’re doing it as we sit here — and they expect to do it during the next campaign.”
As far as Trump is concerned, his own credibility crisis notwithstanding, Mueller was not a reliable witness and his assertions are not to be trusted. I think that’s absurd, but for the sake of conversation, let’s play along for a moment. Let’s put aside the former special counsel’s warnings altogether.









