President Donald Trump said on Oct. 2 that the person who provided the anonymous whistleblower with information about Trump’s call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was “dishonest” and that “this country has to find out who that person was.”
Speaking to reporters at the Oval Office during his meeting with Finnish President Sauli Niinistö, Trump said the person who filed a complaint about the president’s call with Zelensky had mischaracterized details of the July 25 call, saying that the person either provided false information or the person who provided the whistleblower with information was “dishonest.”
“He wrote a vicious conversation. In other words, he either got it totally wrong, made it up, or the person giving the information to the whistleblower was dishonest,” Trump told reporters. “This country has to find out who that person was because that person is a spy in my opinion.”
The president said that he believes a whistleblower should only be protected “if the whistleblower is legitimate.” The whistleblower said in their complaint that they had heard the information from multiple White House officials.
Earlier today, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) said in the press conference that the whistleblower’s identity must be protected as stipulated under law.
The whistleblower’s complaint is centered on secondhand information of Trump’s call with Zelensky, where the person accused the president of pushing Zelensky to look into former Vice President Joe Biden’s activities in Ukraine. The transcript of the call and the complaint was released to the public last week.
House Democrats accused Trump of pressuring Zelensky to launch the probe and withholding military aid to the country if Ukraine did not comply with the request. But the transcript revealed that Trump had asked Zelensky to look into Crowdstrike, a technology firm that was hired by the Democratic National Committee, to probe what happened to its computer network after an alleged hack, and brought up how Biden admittedly pressured then-Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko in 2016 to oust a prosecutor in charge of the probe into Ukrainian energy company Burisma, where Biden’s son was a board member. It did not show any quid pro quo as alleged.
Reports about the complaint and allegation surrounding the call prompted Pelosi to launch an impeachment inquiry into the president, where she alleged the president had seriously violated the constitution.
“They never thought I would release the conversation. They never thought in a million years I would release the conversation,” Trump told reporters during the Oct. 2 meeting.
“When [Pelosi] saw [the transcript] I heard she went crazy. She said we can’t impeach him on this conversation. That’s a great conversation. She went by the whistleblower. The whistleblower was so bad I would even think about it. The whistleblower was wrong. The only thing that matters is the transcript of the actual conversation I had with the president of Ukraine. It was perfect,” Trump said.
House Democrats are moving forward with the inquiry in recent days, by issuing subpoenas to State Department Secretary Mike Pompeo and Trump’s lawyer Rudy Giuliani. Additionally, they have asked five state department officials to appear for depositions including former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch and recently resigned Special Representative for Ukraine Kurt Volker.