In the “Face the Nation” interview that aired yesterday, CBS News’ Margaret Brennan asked Donald Trump about Roger Stone’s recent arrest and the prospect of a pardon. The president, not surprisingly, pretended Stone was a meaningless figure in his political operation and said he hasn’t considered the prospect of a pardon.
It led to this exchange about a possible report from Special Counsel Robert Mueller:
BRENNAN: Would you make the Mueller report public because you say there’s nothing in there? Congress can subpoena it anyway, though.
TRUMP: Totally up to the attorney general.
BRENNAN: But what do you want them to do?
TRUMP: Even the Mueller report said it had nothing to do with the campaign.
The back and forth continued a while longer, culminating in the president saying, in reference to public disclosure of a Mueller report, “It depends. I have no idea what it’s going to say.”
From there, viewers heard the usual palaver about “witch hunts” and the absence of “collusion.”
But while Trump’s rhetoric about the issue was itself notable, it might be worth pausing on the president’s reference to “the Mueller report” and what Trump believes it says — because, as far we know, there is no such thing as a Mueller report, and if there were, there’s no reason to think the president would know what it says.
Look at that quote again: “Even the Mueller report said it had nothing to do with the campaign.” In context, it’s not at all clear what the word “it” referred to, so it’s difficult to assess the assertion on the merits.









