Trump corrects his quote, says misspoke on Russian meddling
By ZEKE MILLER and LISA MASCARO, Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — Blistered by bipartisan condemnation of his embrace of a longtime U.S. enemy, President Donald Trump sought Tuesday to “clarify” his public undermining of American intelligence agencies, saying he had misspoken when he said he saw no reason to believe Russia had interfered in the 2016 U.S. election.
“The sentence should have been, ‘I don’t see any reason why I wouldn’t, or why it wouldn’t be Russia” instead of “why it would,” Trump said, in a rare admission of error by the bombastic U.S. leader. His comment came — amid rising rebuke by his own party — about 27 hours after his original, widely reported statement, which he made at a Monday summit in Helsinki standing alongside Russian President Vladimir Putin.
“I accept our intelligence community’s conclusion that Russia’s meddling in the 2016 election took place,” Trump said Tuesday. But he added, as he usually does, “It could be other people also. A lot of people out there. There was no collusion at all.”
Moments earlier, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell issued a public reassurance to U.S. allies in NATO and Europe with whom Trump clashed during his frenzied Europe trip last week.
“The European countries are our friends, and the Russians are not,” McConnell said.
Trump maintained Tuesday’s summit with Putin went “even better” than his meeting with NATO allies.
That NATO reference carried an edge, too, since the barrage of criticism and insults he delivered in Brussels in London was hardly well-received. He dismissed it all with a new attack on an old target: the news media. He said his NATO meeting was “great” but he “had an even better meeting with Vladimir Putin of Russia. Sadly, it is not being reported that way – the Fake News is going Crazy!”
In fact, the reaction back home has been immediate and visceral, among fellow Republicans as well as usual Trump critics. “Shameful,” ”disgraceful,” ”weak,” were a few of the comments. Makes the U.S. “look like a pushover,” said GOP Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee.
On Capitol Hill, top Republican leaders said they were open to slapping fresh sanctions on Russia but showed no signs of acting any time soon.
“Let’s be very clear, just so everybody knows: Russia did meddle with our elections,” said House Speaker Paul Ryan. “What we intend to do is make sure they don’t get away with it again and also to help our allies.”
In the Senate, Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York called for Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and other top officials to appear before Congress and tell exactly what happened during Trump’s two-hour private session with Putin.
Schumer also urged the Senate to take up legislation to boost security for U.S. elections and to revive a measure passed earlier by the Judiciary Committee to protect Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian election interference.
But minority Democrats have few tools to push their priorities.
In the House, Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi planned a vote Tuesday in support of the intelligence committee’s findings that Russia interfered in the 2016 election.
Senators had floated a similar idea earlier, but The No. 2 Republican, Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, said sanctions may be preferable to a nonbinding resolution that amounts to “just some messaging exercise.”
Corker, the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, said the first step was to get Pompeo to appear, “hopefully” next week.
Trump’s meeting with Putin in Helsinki was his first time sharing the international stage with a man he has described as an important U.S. competitor — but whom he has also praised a strong, effective leader.
His remarks, siding with a foe on foreign soil over his own government, was a stark illustration of Trump’s willingness to upend decades of U.S. foreign policy and rattle Western allies in service of his political concerns. A wary and robust stance toward Russia has been a bedrock of his party’s world view. But Trump made clear he feels that any acknowledgement of Russia’s election involvement would undermine the legitimacy of his election.
Standing alongside Putin, Trump steered clear of any confrontation with the Russian, going so far as to question American intelligence and last week’s federal indictments that accused 12 Russians of hacking into Democratic email accounts to hurt Hillary Clinton in 2016.
“I have great confidence in my intelligence people, but I will tell you that President Putin was extremely strong and powerful in his denial today.
“He just said it’s not Russia. I will say this: I don’t see any reason why it would be,” Trump said. That’s the part he corrected on Tuesday.
His Monday statement drew a quick rebuttal from his director of national Intelligence, Dan Coats.
“We have been clear in our assessments of Russian meddling in the 2016 election and their ongoing, pervasive efforts to undermine our democracy, and we will continue to provide unvarnished and objective intelligence in support of our national security,” Coats said.
Fellow GOP politicians have generally stuck with Trump during a year and a half of turmoil, but he was assailed as seldom before as he returned home Monday night from what he had hoped would be a proud summit with Putin.
Sen. John McCain of Arizona was most outspoken, declaring that Trump made a “conscious choice to defend a tyrant” and achieved “one of the most disgraceful performances by an American president in memory.”
Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul emerged as one of the president’s few defenders from his own party. He defended Trump’s skepticism to CBS News Tuesday citing the president’s experience on the receiving end of “partisan investigations.”
Back at the White House, Paul’s comments drew a presidential tweet of gratitude. “Thank you @RandPaul, you really get it!” Trump tweeted.
In all, Trump’s remarks amounted to an unprecedented embrace of a man who for years has been isolated by the U.S. and Western allies for actions in Ukraine, Syria and beyond. And it came at the end of an extraordinary trip to Europe in which Trump had already berated allies, questioned the value of the NATO alliance and demeaned leaders including Germany’s Angela Merkel and Britain’s Theresa May.
In Helsinki, Putin said he had indeed wanted Trump to win the election — a revelation that might have made more headlines if not for Trump’s performance — but had taken no action to make it happen.
“Yes, I wanted him to win because he spoke of normalization of Russian-U.S. ties,” Putin said. “Isn’t it natural to feel sympathy to a person who wanted to develop relations with our country? It’s normal.”
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Associated Press writers Ken Thomas and Darlene Superville in Washington, and Jill Colvin, Jonathan Lemire, and Vladimir Isachenkov in Helsinki contributed to this report.
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Follow Miller on Twitter at http://twitter.com/@ZekeJMiller and Mascaro at http://twitter.com/@LisaMascaro.
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The Trump-Putin summit news hub is active on the AP News site and the mobile app. It showcases AP’s overall coverage of the event. It can be found at https://www.apnews.com/tag/Trump-PutinSummit
Category: News
Center Township’s 2018 Road Repair Program
It’s set to get underway today. WBVP-WMBA’s news correspondent, Sandy Giordano spoke with the Township Engineer.
Hazmat Team called to Crash
WBVP-WMBA intern Malik Garrett has the story
More Protests in Pittsburgh over shooting
Police diverted traffic as Protesters blocked Grant Street at the Boulevard of the Allies in downtown Pittsburgh during the Monday evening rush hour.
After a man’s car was circled by protesters The driver told police he was assaulted.
“The type of demonstrations that we’re doing are dangerous but it’s more dangerous to not do something,” said one of the protest leaders, Nicky Jo Dawson.
Members of the crowd were protesting the June shooting death of 17-year-old Antwon Rose Jr. by an East Pittsburgh police officer who has been charged with homicide
One protester is seen punching the hood of the truck multiple times. The doors of the truck were flung open.
Police in tactical gear helped an ambulance with its lights on to cross through the blocked off intersection on its way to UPMC Mercy hospital.
No arrests were made Monday according to Pittsburgh Bureau of Police spokesman Chris Togneri.
Stabbing in Aliquippa
Stabbing in Aliquippa
According to a police report, 51 yr old Carl Zedak said he had been intoxicated for 3 straight days, got into a fight about a woman, then stabbed her boyfriend in the back four times.
Zedak was charged by Aliquippa police with attempted homicide, aggravated assault, possession of an instrument of crime, attempted assault, reckless endangerment and simple assault.
Fire at Milk House Meats
A fire, believed to be electrical in nature, broke out in the production room of Milk House Meats on Sunday afternoon, destroying most of the equipment. North Sewickley Township Assistant Fire Chief Randy Syphrit said the metal building with a metal interior and the hot day magnified the temperatures for firefighters. The metal walls had to be removed to get to the fire. A firefighter from Franklin was treated for heat exhaustion.
Milk House Meats was started about three years ago by 2013 Riverside High School graduate Freddie Pflugh,a fourth-generation meat cutter, in a former milk house on his family’s farm.
Voter Registration Reform
Nationally, 92 million Americans eligible to vote did not do so in 2016 and the left-leaning Center for American Progress, based in Washington, D.C., said Pennsylvania could have 323,000 more voters “just by implementing automatic voter registration” and 116,000 additional voters by offering early voting.
Of the eight benchmarks used to measure states’ performance on voter turnout efforts, Pennsylvania met just two: online voter registration and restoration of voting rights after incarceration. Earlier this year, Gov. Tom Wolf unveiled his 21st century voting reform plan, which includes proposals for same-day voter registration, automatic voter registration and no-excuse absentee ballots.
Only 2% of those who didn’t vote cited registration problems as the reason.
15-year-old boy shot to death
Allegheny County Police were called in Wilkinsburg shortly before 7:30 p.m. on Monday to the area of South Dell Way near Penn Avenue, a roadway generally untraveled by vehicles, for a person bleeding and lying on the ground.
Officers and paramedics found a 15-year-old boy shot to death.
The Allegheny County Police Homicide Unit is investigating. Anyone with information is asked to call the Allegheny County Police Tip Line at 1-833-255-8477.
Missing 16 Year Old Found
55-year-old Bruce Kirkpatrick was arrested in Michigan and is facing three counts of criminal sexual conduct for his alleged involvement in connection with the disappearance of a Westmoreland County teenager.
The 16-year-old girl was found safe in Michigan on Friday.
The teen was last seen around 4 p.m. on June 26.
Her mother Stephanie Grantham said it was a frightening time. Grantham offered this advice for parents: Try to have good communication with your kids and that if you see something is off, talk to them
Shell “actively pursuing” employees from Beaver Valley Nuclear Power Station
Glenn Camp, the president and assistant business manager of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 29 in Pittsburgh, stated in court documents that Shell Chemicals is “actively pursuing” employees at the Beaver Valley Nuclear Power Station who are looking to leave their jobs amid uncertainty surrounding the future of the power plant.
Morale at the plant is low, Camp said, because FirstEnergy has implemented a program that pays bonuses to managers, supervisors and other non-union employees, as an incentive to keep those workers at the company’s power plants.
The retention bonuses do not apply to any of the 380 IBEW union members at Beaver Valley. At least 20 members of his union are already scheduled for job interviews with Shell for potential employment at the cracker plant.
Camp also said in the court documents that he’s fearful about safety at the plant if his workers leave en masse in the coming months.
“Without retention payments for (union) employees, (FirstEnergy) may not have enough qualified employees to safely staff the Beaver Valley plant,”







