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Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Was There a Wiretap of Trump?

Courtesy of Pam Martens

President Donald Trump Berates the Media in a Hastily Called Press Conference on February 16, 2017

President Donald Trump Berates the Media in a Hastily Called Press Conference on February 16, 2017

Commander-in-Tweet Donald Trump has potentially dug a deep hole for himself. By publishing a Tweet over the weekend stating that President Obama had tapped his phones during the Presidential election campaign, Trump has simultaneously suggested that a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act court (FISA court) found sufficient evidence to warrant a wiretap. (The wiretap would have been at the behest of an intelligence agency, not President Obama directly.)

Chuck Todd, host of Sunday’s Meet the Press, summed up the mess as follows on his program yesterday: “It’s such a serious allegation. I mean it is either, if it’s true, it’s an extraordinary political scandal. And if it’s not true, it’s an extraordinary political scandal.”

It should be noted that if it’s not true, it would be not so much a political scandal as it would be another in a long, long series of off-the-wall falsehoods promulgated by Trump with no negative ramification to his career – unless one considers being elevated to the highest public office in the land a negative impact. For years, Trump was a leading purveyor of the birther meme that former President Obama had no legitimacy as President because he was foreign born and not entitled to hold the office. Then, abruptly, Trump decided to renounce that position.

While there has been only glowing embers and a little smoke before on the ties between the Trump camp and Russian officials, there’s now darting flames scorching a lot of toes.

Trump’s Attorney General, Jeff Sessions, was forced to admit last week that he misspoke in his Senate confirmation hearing. Sessions now concedes that he did meet with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak. Trump’s former National Security Advisor, Michael Flynn, was forced to resign after transcripts showed he had discussed Russian sanctions with Kislyak prior to Trump taking office. A new revelation concerns Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law who is married to Ivanka Trump. Both serve as advisers to the President. According to multiple media reports, Kushner was part of a meeting with Kislyak at Trump Tower in December. JD Gordon, another Trump policy adviser, met with Kislyak at the Republican National Convention last July, as did Carter Page, a Trump policy adviser and oil industry consultant.

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