President Donald Trump appeared to threaten a government whistleblower who is protected under federal law, adding to the list of accusations that could fuel the impeachment inquiry in Congress.
Trump said the unidentified whistleblower had no direct knowledge of the president’s actions and was “almost a spy,” according to an account of his remarks Thursday to members of the U.S. Mission to the United Nations. A recording of the private meeting was published by the Los Angeles Times.
He also took aim at unidentified White House officials cited in the whistle-blower’s complaint. “I want to know who’s the person, who’s the person who gave the whistle-blower the information? Because that’s close to a spy,” Trump said. He went on: “You know what we used to do in the old days when we were smart with spies and treason, right? We used to handle it a little differently than we do now.”
Whistleblowers are supposed to be protected from retaliation by superiors, and the law outlines the procedures. This employee who came forward followed those steps, said Joseph Maguire, the acting director of national intelligence.
“I think he followed the law every step of the way,” Maguire told the House Intelligence Committee on Thursday.
The Democratic chairmen of three powerful House committees said Trump’s words could harm their effort to secure testimony from the intelligence whistle-blower and others.
“The president’s comments today constitute reprehensible witness intimidation and an attempt to obstruct Congress’ impeachment inquiry,” a statement from Representatives Eliot Engel, Adam Schiff and Elijah Cummings said.
A federal law passed in 1998 outlines the procedure for members of the intelligence community to complain confidentially about government practices, while protecting them from retaliatory acts like getting fired or demoted. The Intelligence Community Whistle-Blower Protection Act spells out how employees or contractors should give information to Congress.
“The law says we will give protections to whistle-blowers to have the confidence to come forward,” said John Phillips, whose Washington law firm represents whistleblowers. “You have to do that in this world because we know how whistle-blowers can get chewed up and pay a huge price for revealing information that’s harmful to others.”
Phillips said that Trump’s comments could have a chilling effect on would-be informants.
“If the president calls a whistleblower a spy, he’s discouraging others from coming forward,” Phillips said. “Who wants to be labeled as a spy by the president?”
Senator Susan Collins, a Republican member of the Intelligence Committee who sometimes breaks with Trump, also expressed concern.
“Whistleblowers have been essential in bringing to the public’s attention wrongdoing, fraud, waste, abuse, law-breaking, and I very much disagree with the president’s characterization,” she told reporters on Thursday.
The intense focus on the intelligence employee who came forward could threaten his or her anonymity. The New York Times reported Thursday that the person was a Central Intelligence Agency employee who was assigned to work at the White House at one point but has since returned to the CIA.
Critics said the Times was encouraging intimidation of the whistle-blower. The newspaper’s executive editor, Dean Baquet, defended his decision to publish details about the person, saying it was “essential to understanding one of the most important issues facing the country — whether the president of the United States abused power and whether the White House covered it up.”
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