McCain calls on Trump to provide proof on Obama wiretap claims

Republican senator urges president to back up allegations or admit he was wrong

Sen John McCain: “So far, I don’t think the American people have gotten all the answers.” Photograph: Aaron P Bernstein/Reuters
Sen John McCain: “So far, I don’t think the American people have gotten all the answers.” Photograph: Aaron P Bernstein/Reuters

Republican and Democratic politicians on Sunday said they still haven’t seen evidence to support US president Donald Trump’s unverified claim that his predecessor tapped his phones, but they expect the facts will soon emerge.

Senator John McCain, an Arizona Republican, called on the president to provide proof of his allegations about Barack Obama, or admit he was wrong.

“The president has one of two choices: either retract or to provide the information that the American people deserve,” Mr McCain said on CNN’s State of the Union.

Mr McCain said he had “no reason to believe that the charge is true” and that Mr Trump could clear up the matter by asking the intelligence community for the facts.

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The comments came a day before Monday’s deadline set by the house intelligence committee, asking the department of justice to provide any documentary evidence relating to Mr Trump’s allegation, according to ABC News and the Associated Press.

Representative Adam Schiff, the top Democrat on the house panel, said on ABC's This Week that he expected to see no such evidence and suggested that none existed.

He said he hoped to put the matter to rest on March 20th, when FBI director James Comey is scheduled to testify before the committee.

Disturbing

Mr Comey asked the justice department to publicly reject Mr Trump’s claims because they were false, the New York Times reported on March 5th.

“Either the president quite deliberately for some reason made up the charge or, perhaps more disturbing, the president really believes this,” Mr Schiff said on ABC.

Republican senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas, who sits on the senate intelligence committee, also said he had "not seen that evidence" of wiretapping, but he declined to call on Mr Trump to apologise to Mr Obama.

“President Trump said last weekend that he wanted the intelligence committees in the senate and the house to take up this matter as part of our broader inquiry into Russia’s activities into our political system last year,” Mr Cotton said on Face the Nation on CBS. “We’re going to do exactly that.”

Mr Trump tweeted to his 26.4 million followers on March 4th that Mr Obama had his “wires tapped in Trump Tower” prior to the election and called the former president a “bad (or sick) guy”.

A spokesman for Mr Obama called the claims "simply false," and the former director of national intelligence James Clapper, who left the government in January, has said there was no wiretap activity directed at Mr Trump or his campaign by the Obama administration.

The White House hasn’t provided evidence for the claim, saying it won’t comment beyond asking the relevant congressional committees to look into the allegations as part of their probes into allegations that Russia tried to help Mr Trump during the 2016 presidential election.

Centipede

Since then, attorney general

Jeff Sessions

, who recused himself from investigations related to the 2016 presidential campaign, instead told a conservative radio host on March 9th that he was open to naming a outside counsel to look into the justice department under Mr Obama.

On Friday, Mr Sessions asked 46 US attorneys who were appointed by Mr Obama to resign.

Mr McCain told CNN there were “a lot of aspects” of the relationship between the Trump campaign and Russia that required more investigation.

“So far, I don’t think the American people have gotten all the answers,” Mr McCain said. “In fact, I think there’s a lot more shoes to drop from this centipede.”

Dmitry Peskov, a spokesman for Russian president Vladimir Putin, denied during an interview on CNN on Sunday that the Russian government collaborated with Mr Trump's campaign.

Russians had a natural preference for Mr Trump because of his desire for dialogue, while Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton had been more hostile to Russia, he said.

“It’s quite natural, but that doesn’t mean, in no way, that Russia has interfered in electoral process,” Mr Peskov said.

Mr Trump and Mr Putin might meet at the G20 summit in Hamburg in July if there was no agreement on earlier talks, Mr Peskov said.

– (Bloomberg)