During his confirmation hearing last week on Capitol Hill, Christopher Wray, Donald Trump’s choice to lead the FBI, said if any campaign is contacted by a foreign government, it’d be “wise” to contact federal law enforcement officials.
“[A]ny threat or effort to interfere with our elections from any nation state or any nonstate actor is the kind of thing the FBI would want to know,” Wray told the Senate Judiciary Committee.
And yet, just this morning, the president took a very different posture. Donald Trump declared via Twitter that when top members of his campaign’s inner circle met with a Kremlin-linked lawyer and a former Soviet counterintelligence officer to obtain information about his opponent, it was a meeting “most politicians” would have gone along with. “That’s politics!” Trump declared.
So, which is it? Is Chris Wray right that campaigns should contact the FBI, or is the president right that campaigns should just see outreach from foreign adversaries as routine politics? A reporter asked White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer about the contradiction today.
White House press secretary Sean Spicer on Monday appeared to be confused about Donald Trump Jr.’s June 2016 meeting with a Russian lawyer, claiming it was about adoptions — contradicting both Donald Trump Jr. and the president, who have both confirmed the true reason for the meeting.









