Re-election easier, if impeachment proceedings begin against me says Donald Trump
Washington, June 24: US President Donald Trump said in an interview broadcast Sunday his chances of retaining the White House in 2020 would be strengthened if Democratic lawmakers start impeachment proceedings against him.
Asked on NBC's "Meet the Press" whether he thought impeachment was good politics for him, Trump replied, "I think I win the election easier." The President repeated his longstanding allegation that the FBI's counterintelligence investigation into his 2016 campaign was illegal.
"I was spied on. What they did to me was illegal. It was illegal on the other side. I did nothing wrong," he said in the previously recorded interview.
"So impeachment's a very unfair thing because nothing that I did was wrong. And if you look at the Mueller report, there was no collusion. This was all about collusion." The Democrats are split over whether Trump should be impeached after the Mueller Report into Russian interference in the 2016 election outlined numerous contacts between his campaign and Russians, as well as evidence that the president tried on several occasions to stymie the investigation.
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While many of the candidates for the Democratic nomination are pro-impeachment, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has argued that it would be a risky move without an "ironclad" case and bipartisan support.
If the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives were to vote on formal impeachment charges, the Republican-held Senate would decide whether to convict, which requires an unlikely two-thirds majority.
Trump told "Meet the Press" Pelosi was staving off growing impeachment calls from within the Democratic caucus because she agreed with his assessment that it would harm their prospects in 2020.
"I think she feels that I will win much easier," Trump said. "I mean, I've been told that by many people." Former special counsel Robert Mueller spent nearly two years investigating Russian election interference and possible involvement by Trump and his inner circle.
He concluded that there wasn't sufficient proof of a criminal conspiracy but found that Trump's campaign welcomed and expected to benefit electorally from information stolen and released through Russian efforts.
Trump
would
not
commit
to
addressing
foreign
election
interference
with
Russian
President
Vladimir
Putin
when
they
meet
at
the
G20
summit
in
Osaka
later
this
month.
Asked
by
"Meet
the
Press"
host
Chuck
Todd
if
he
would
directly
bring
up
the
issue
with
Putin,
Trump
said,
apparently
sarcastically:
"I
may
if
you'd
like
me
to
do
it,
I'll
do
that."
In a wide-ranging interview Trump said he was not prepared to lose his reelection bid and revealed that former vice president Joe Biden was his preferred opponent.
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"No I'm probably not too prepared to lose. I don't like losing. I haven't lost very much in my life," he said.
He
offered
rare
praise
for
2016
rival
Hillary
Clinton,
saying
she
was
a
"great
candidate"
and
that
he
would
rather
run
against
Biden
than
face
her
again.
"Sleepy
Joe.
He's
sleepy.
She
was
not
sleepy,"
he
said.
Asked about a roiling controversy over substandard conditions in holding centres for migrant children at the southern border, Trump blamed former president Barack Obama for the Trump administration's family separations policy and said Democrats were holding up humanitarian aid.
"We're doing a fantastic job under the circumstances," Trump said.
"What we've done is we've created, we've, we've ended separation. You know, under President Obama you had separation. I was the one that ended it," he added.
On foreign policy, Trump declined to commit to ordering the FBI to investigate the murder of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi and possible links to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
UN special rapporteur Agnes Callamard has said there is "credible evidence" to warrant investigation and financial sanctions against the prince over Khashoggi's murder in the Saudi embassy in Istanbul last October.
Trump suggested that other Middle Eastern countries such as Iran had committed worse crimes and that an investigation would be harmful for America's business interests.