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Trump didn't mean wiretapping when he tweeted about 'wire tapping' - Spicer

“The president used the word wiretap in quotes to mean broadly surveillance and other activities.”

THE US JUSTICE Department has asked lawmakers for more time to provide evidence backing up President Donald Trump’s unproven assertion that his predecessor wiretapped his New York skyscraper during the election.

The request came as the White House appeared to soften Trump’s explosive allegation.

The House intelligence committee said it would give the Justice Department until next Monday to comply with the evidence request.

That’s the date of the committee’s first open hearing on the investigation into Russia’s interference in the 2016 election and possible contacts between Trump associates and Russia.

White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer has said that Trump was referring more broadly to surveillance when he used the term ‘wire tapping’.

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A spokesman for the committee’s Republican chairman said that if the Justice Department doesn’t meet the new deadline, the panel might use its subpoena power to gather information.

“If the committee does not receive a response by then, the committee will ask for this information during the March 20 hearing and may resort to a compulsory process if our questions continue to go unanswered,” said a spokesman for Congressman Devin Nunes.

Trump’s assertions have put his administration in a bind.

Current and former administration officials have been unable to provide any evidence of the Obama administration wiretapping Trump Tower, yet the president’s aides have been reluctant to publicly contradict their boss.

Spicer tried to clarify Trump’s comments in his briefing yesterday, saying the president wasn’t using the word wiretapping literally, noting that Trump had put the term in quotation marks.

“The president used the word wiretap in quotes to mean broadly surveillance and other activities,” Spicer said.

Raw Story / YouTube

He also suggested Trump wasn’t accusing former President Barack Obama specifically, but instead referring to the actions of the Obama administration.

Trump himself has not commented on the matter since his 4 March tweets, in which he said he had “just found out that Obama had my ‘wires tapped’ in Trump Tower just before the victory.”

He also wrote: “Is it legal for a sitting President to be ‘wire tapping’ a race for president?”

In two other tweets, Trump described Obama tapping his phones, but did not put the phrases in quotation marks.

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The president’s accusations against Obama came amid numerous political questions surrounding his associates’ possible ties to Russia. The FBI is investigating Trump associates’ contacts with Russia during the election, as are House and Senate intelligence committees.

The White House has asked those committees to also investigate Trump’s unverified wiretapping allegations against Obama. The House committee has turned the matter back on the Trump administration, setting the Monday deadline for the Justice Department to provide evidence.

In a response yesterday evening, the Justice Department said it needed extra time to “review the request in compliance with the governing legal authorities and to determine what if any responsive documents may exist.”

Other congressional committees are also pushing the administration to clarify Trump’s claims.

Senator John McCain, an influential Republican and former presidential candidate, said at the weekend:

I think the president has one of two choices: either retract or to provide the information that the American people deserve.

“If his predecessor violated the law, President Obama violated the law, we have got a serious issue here, to say the least,” McCain said.

White House advisor Kellyanne Conway sidestepped questions about the lack of proof yesterday, saying she was “not in the job of having evidence”.

“That’s what investigations are for,” Conway told CNN’s ‘New Day’.

The president is pleased that the House and Senate intelligence committees have agreed that this should be part of the investigation that already exists about Russia and the campaign, an investigation that apparently has gone nowhere so far.

TheJournal.ie’s political reporter Christina Finn will be bringing you all the latest updates from Enda Kenny’s visit to Washington this week, including his meeting with US President Donald Trump on Thursday.

Stay up-to-date by following @ChristinaFinn8@TJ_Politics  and TheJournal.ie’s Facebook page

- With reporting from Daragh Brophy 

Read: Kellyanne Conway on surveillance through phones, TVs and ‘microwaves that turn into cameras’ >

Read: US judge refuses to rule on Trump’s latest travel ban >

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