There’s no shortage of interesting angles to the latest reports about Donald Trump Jr. and his chat with a Kremlin-linked lawyer during the campaign, but as TPM noted, the revelations have renewed interest in “the Trump administration’s denials that any such meetings took place.”
“Did any adviser or anybody in the Trump campaign have any contact with the Russians who were trying to meddle in the election?” CBS’s John Dickerson asked then Vice President-elect Mike Pence on Jan. 15.
“Of course not,” Pence replied.
The specific wording of the question doesn’t do Pence any favors: a Russian lawyer trying to meddle in the election had a private chat with Donald Trump Jr., Jared Kushner, and Paul Manafort — because the campaign thought the lawyer would dish dirt on Hillary Clinton.
We now know, of course, that this is one of several important falsehoods the vice president has peddled since the election, including a variety of bogus claims related to the Trump-Russia scandal.
But what sometimes gets lost in the shuffle is the fact that Pence wasn’t the only one denying the interactions between the campaign and the foreign adversary trying to help the campaign.









