Trump hints at payback for 'evil' enemies over Mueller report
- Published
President Donald Trump says his enemies who did "evil" and "treasonous things" will be under scrutiny after he was absolved of colluding with Russia.
Speaking in the Oval Office, he said no other president should have to be investigated over "a false narrative".
He spoke a day after the attorney general released a summary of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's completed report.
It clears Mr Trump of conspiring with Russia to steal the US 2016 election.
But the long-awaited report stops short of exonerating Mr Trump of obstruction of justice.
US Attorney General William Barr ruled there was no evidence requiring prosecution on the obstruction issue.
What did President Trump say?
Mr Trump was hosting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the White House on Monday when a reporter asked him about the outcome of the Mueller report.
"There's a lot of people out there that have done some very, very evil things, very bad things," Mr Trump said, "I would say treasonous things, against our country."
"And hopefully people that have done such harm to our country, we've gone through a period of really bad things happening.
"Those people will certainly be looked at, I've been looking at them for a long time.
"And I'm saying, 'why haven't they been looked at?' They lied to Congress - many of them, you know who they are - they've' done so many evil things."
Mr Trump did not name the alleged culprits.
He added: "It was a false narrative, it was a terrible thing, we can never let this happen to another president again, I can tell you that. I say it very strongly."
What's the political reaction?
On Monday, Senate Judiciary chairman Lindsey Graham laid out the Republican strategy as he pledged to "unpack the other side of the story" of the Russia investigation.
The South Carolina senator, who spent the weekend with Mr Trump in Florida, said his panel would investigate the Department of Justice-led inquiry.
The FBI's use of a dossier compiled to discredit Mr Trump by a former British spy, Christopher Steele, would be among aspects under scrutiny, said Mr Graham.
Meanwhile, Democrats are focusing on a line in the attorney general's summary that says Mr Mueller's report "does not exonerate" Mr Trump of obstruction of justice, even though Mr Barr concluded on Sunday there was insufficient evidence that Mr Trump had committed a crime.
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler said he would summon Mr Barr to testify soon "in light of the very concerning discrepancies and final decision making at the justice department".
On Monday, six Democratic congressional committee chairs sent a letter to Mr Barr, external demanding the release of the full, "complete and unredacted" report by 2 April, saying the summary "is not sufficient".
Earlier, Republican Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell blocked a move by Democrats to urge Mr Barr to release the Mueller report to the public.
He said it was too early to release the full report as "the special counsel and the justice department ought to be allowed to finish their work".
Senator McConnell also posted on Twitter: "No collusion. No conspiracy. No obstruction."
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The House Appropriations Committee has set a hearing date of 9 April for the Department of Justice' budget, which Mr Barr is expected to attend, Politico reported, external. Other committees could call him to testify even sooner.
But California Congresswoman Katie Hill told Politico she does not think much will change.
"None of us were waiting on the Mueller report in terms of deciding what we were going to be doing," she said. "Our investigations didn't depend on the Mueller report."