As I detailed Thursday, Trump himself denied his legal team was headed for a shake-up on March 11. Eleven days later, he had added one lawyer (Joe diGenova), tried to add another (Ted Olson) and seen his lead personal lawyer resign (Dowd).
The Failing New York Times purposely wrote a false story stating that I am unhappy with my legal team on the Russia case and am going to add another lawyer to help out. Wrong. I am VERY happy with my lawyers, John Dowd, Ty Cobb and Jay Sekulow. They are doing a great job and.....
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) March 11, 2018
Trump's above tweet was responding to a New York Times report that he might hire another lawyer, Emmet Flood, whom he hasn't brought on. But it clearly created the impression that no changes on his legal team were in the offing. Trump said it was “wrong” to say he was going to add another lawyer; he did so eight days later with diGenova. And Trump's claims to be “VERY happy” with his legal team clearly weren't true.
The White House's denial of McMaster's exit might be even worse. Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders on March 15 denied a Washington Post report that Trump had decided to replace McMaster: “Contrary to reports they have a good working relationship and there are no changes at the NSC.”
Just spoke to @POTUS and Gen. H.R. McMaster - contrary to reports they have a good working relationship and there are no changes at the NSC.
— Sarah Sanders (@PressSec) March 16, 2018
It was clear at the time that this perhaps wasn't an ironclad denial.
Non-denial denial alert: The Post's story doesn't say this has already happened. It said he has decided to remove McMaster and will attempt to do it gracefully. This is consistent with that. https://t.co/iT7TqTEmpA
— Aaron Blake (@AaronBlake) March 16, 2018
Sanders's statement may be defensible if you parse it the right way. She does deny the report, but she would probably argue she was only denying the part about Trump and McMaster not getting along — not McMaster's impending departure.
But even if she was splitting that hair, the tweet was hugely misleading. In the rest of the tweet, Sanders says “there are no changes at the NSC” — which was, at the time, strictly true; McMaster wasn't removed until a week later. But The Post's report didn't say it had already happened — only that it would. By denying the report, Sanders left the impression that its central claim was wrong. It 100 percent was not.
Sanders's denial is even worse when you consider this: McMaster himself confirmed Thursday to the Times that his impending departure had been discussed for weeks and that “really, the only issue that had been left open is timing.” Despite that, the White House decided to pretend this wasn't happening and issue a hugely misleading denial.
Look, I get it: You can't confirm a report that someone is leaving before they have left. Non-denial denials are somewhat commonplace in politics. But usually they're more artfully crafted. Someone like Sanders might say something like, “General McMaster still has the president's confidence, and we have nothing more to say about this speculation.” Her statement last week went much further, though, to suggest The Post's accurate report was wrong.
Rarely has a politician's office — much less a White House — been so willing to torch its credibility over basically nothing.
The White House has denied for weeks that McMaster was on his way out. After we reported in late February that his departure would happen soon, I was told by White House officials that it was an unsubstantiated rumor, a disgrace to reporting, etc, etc. Yet here we are.
— Kaitlan Collins (@kaitlancollins) March 22, 2018