Skip to main content
Skip to content
Case File
d-17965House OversightOther

White House attempts to deflect Trump phone‑tap claims and shift blame to Obama era

The passage offers only vague anecdotes about internal White House reactions and unverified quotes, without specific names, dates, transactions, or actionable evidence. It repeats already‑public narra Former senior U.S. officials dismissed Trump’s wiretap accusations as nonsense. Ben Rhodes allegedly referenced the dismissal in a cryptic manner. White House circulated a Breitbart article linking t

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #020003
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage offers only vague anecdotes about internal White House reactions and unverified quotes, without specific names, dates, transactions, or actionable evidence. It repeats already‑public narra Former senior U.S. officials dismissed Trump’s wiretap accusations as nonsense. Ben Rhodes allegedly referenced the dismissal in a cryptic manner. White House circulated a Breitbart article linking t

Tags

political-deflectionmedia-manipulationwhite-house-communicationstrumpunverified-intelligence-claimshouse-oversightwiretap-allegationsobama-administration

Ask AI About This Document

0Share
PostReddit

Extracted Text (OCR)

EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
According to CNN, “Iwo former senior U.S. officials quickly dismissed Trump’s accusations out of hand. ‘Just nonsense,’ said one former senior U.S. intelligence official.” Inside the White House, the “just nonsense” quote was thought to be from Ben Rhodes, offered in cat-that-swallowed-the-canary fashion. Ryan, for his part, told Priebus he had no idea what Baier was talking about and that he was just BSing through the interview. But if tapping Trump’s phones wasn’t literally true, there was a sudden effort to find something that might be, and a frantic White House dished up a Breitbart article that linked to a piece by Louise Mensch, a former British politician who, now living in the United States, had become a kind of conspiracy-central of the Trump-Russia connection. There was a further effort to push aggressive incidental collection and unmasking back onto the Obama White House. But in the end, this was another—and to some quite the ultimate—example of how difficult it was for the president to function in a literal, definitional, lawyerly, cause-and-effect political world. It was a turning point. Until now, Trump’s inner circle had been mostly game to defend him. But after the wiretap tweets, everybody, save perhaps Hope Hicks, moved into a state of queasy sheepishness, if not constant incredulity. Sean Spicer, for one, kept repeating his daily, if not hourly, mantra: “You can’t make this shit up.”

Forum Discussions

This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.

Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.