Trump and Barr’s White House meeting this week was “controversial,” the source said.


Her bosses were outraged by the interview, many familiar with her reaction said.

On Thursday, Trump will not say whether he trusts the bar.

“Ask me in a few weeks from now. They should be paying attention to all this fraud,” Trump said after pausing for a moment to answer a question asked by reporters at the Oval Office for the Medal for the Freedom Medal.

Trump on Thursday also reiterated baseless claims of “massive fraud” and “rigged elections.” As state officials and Barry said, there is no evidence of widespread electoral fraud.

Trump said of Burr and his administration’s Justice Department, “He did nothing. He didn’t look for fraud in the Georgia election.”

The Justice Department released a statement Tuesday after Barrow’s remarks to the Associated Press, claiming it had not completed its investigation into election fraud and therefore “did not announce a definitive detection of election fraud.”

A spokesman for the Justice Department, who did not speak on the record, said, “The department will receive all specific and credible allegations of fraud as soon as possible and proceed vigorously.” “

ABC News reported the first tense White House meeting.
Trump was disappointed with Barr after the election remarks but officials did not want to fire AG, sources said.

Although White House Press Secretary Kyle McKinney said Wednesday he did not know Trump and Barr met when they were at the White House on Tuesday, sources described the meeting as controversial but said the president did not shout at the bar.

Long before the interview, Trump was frustrated with Burr but said it had only increased his anger. Two White House officials said that while Trump was determined to fire Burr, he was being advised by many.

It is anyone’s guess whether he will eventually make a wish.

Trump is sensitive about firing someone like a bar after FBI Director James Cummins was fired. Trump is concerned about the legal crisis once he comes out of office and the removal of the attorney general could raise more questions for him.

Burney’s remarks to the AP were the latest official rebuke from a Republican alleging widespread fraud by the president in the damage done to BD.

“To date, we have not seen fraud on standards that could lead to a different outcome in an election,” Bair said.

Before the election, Bear, who echoed Trump’s claims that the mail-in ballot was not secure, said both the Department of Justice and the Department of Homeland Security investigated fraud allegations and vacated them.

Two attorneys working for Trump quickly rejected Burr’s assessment on Tuesday, saying “there is evidence of illegal voting in at least six states,” which they say the attorney general is not private.

Proponents of her case have been working to make the actual transcript of this statement available online.

Prosecutors have yet to show any evidence to support their claims, which have been rejected by multiple state courts across the country, and their efforts will soon hit the wall as many states – such as Michigan’s main states, Georgia and Pennsylvania – are certified. Or to certify their results.

Several other leading Republican officials have also denied widespread voter fraud claims, including Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, who said earlier this week that his state election is safe, and condemned the president.

Gov. Georgia last week. Brian Kemp and Georgia’s secretary of state said they rejected invitations from Trump to back the state’s election results, saying his election was safe.

In addition to Trump’s failure to support voter fraud claims, the main frustration with Trump’s burr is the lack of a John Durham report. Trump and his senior White House staffers were under the impression that he would come out before the election, and Trump has repeatedly asked people, “Where is he?”

CNN’s Evan Perez, Betsy Klein, Jim Acosta and Dewan Cole contributed to the report.

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