President Trump has hinted that there are “tapes” of his
conversations with James Comey, but the Oval Office apparently isn’t the only
place in Washington that is bugged. Earlier this week, the Washington
Post published an account of a June 2016 meeting of the House Republican
leadership in which Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Cal.) joked about Donald
Trump being on the Russian payroll. Now House leaders are concerned that there
might be more revelations from past closed door sessions.
Axios
reports that Republicans are scrambling to determine the source of the leak
even as they wait for the next shoe to drop. “The unknown is frustrating,” said
one GOP aide.
The Post story notes that the conversation occurred on the
day after news broke that Russians were responsible for the hacking of the
Democratic National Committee. The conversation reportedly took place shortly
after McCarthy and Speaker Ryan had met with Ukrainian Prime Minister Vladimir
Groysman, who had discussed Putin’s tactic of “financing people in our governments
to undo our governments” and using “very sophisticated” propaganda throughout
Europe.
“There’s two people I think Putin pays: [Rep. Dana] Rohrabacher
(R-Cal.) and Trump,” McCarthy joked. “Swear to God.” McCarthy also speculated
that the hack of the DNC was to steal Democrat opposition research on Donald
Trump.
The Post reports that the remark drew laughs before Speaker
Paul Ryan interjected, “This is off the record,” and admonished those present, “No
leaks…. This is how we know we’re a real family here.”
Rohrabacher, like Trump, has a reputation as a defender of
the President Vladimir Putin and the current Russian regime. In November 2016, Politico
profiled Rohrabacher as “Putin’s favorite congressman.”
Adam Entous, the author of the Post story, says that the
article was based on both a written transcript
and “a recording of the June 15, 2016, exchange, which was listened to and
verified by The Washington Post.” If Entous’s claims of a recording are
accurate, it is possible that either someone at the meeting was recording the conversation
or that a bug had been planted in the room.
There are two prime suspects for the source of the
recording. One is that a bug was planted by a member of the Ukrainian
delegation. The “Kiev, Ukraine” dateline of the Post story lends some credence
to this possibility, but the Axios sources within the GOP say that it is
unlikely since security teams regularly sweep the capitol for bugs and, to
their knowledge, none has been found.
A more likely possibility, the sources say, is that the
meeting was recorded by Evan McMullin, a leadership aide last June who became
an independent presidential candidate. Jonathan Swan, author of the Axios
story, says that his sources say that the Post denied that McMullin was the
leaker and that there is no evidence that he was responsible. If McMullin was
the leaker, it is unclear why he would wait to use the tapes now rather than
during his presidential campaign.
Regardless of where the recording originated, Republican
leaders are concerned about what leaks may come next. If the leaker was
McMullin, he attended many private meetings and would have had the opportunity
to record reams of sensitive information. If the bug is still active, it could
be used to undermine GOP legislative strategies.
Leaks have become commonplace in Washington over the past
few years. From the Russian leaks of Democratic emails to disaffected staffers
leaking embarrassing information about Donald Trump to the president’s own leak
of classified information to the Russians, it seems that no one in Washington
can be counted on to keep a secret.
Originally published
on The
Resurgent
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