Advertisement

Anthony Scaramucci says he’ll contact FBI after leak of his financial disclosure

White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci points as he answers questions from members of the media during the press briefing in the Brady Press Briefing room of the White House in Washington, Friday, July 21, 2017.
White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci points as he answers questions from members of the media during the press briefing in the Brady Press Briefing room of the White House in Washington, Friday, July 21, 2017. AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci tweeted on Wednesday that he was contacting the FBI and the Justice Department over media reports about his financial disclosure information.

It came after a report in Politico said Scaramucci could keep profiting from SkyBridge Capital, his investment firm, while he works at the White House.

Scaramucci made $4.9 million from his ownership of the firm on top of $5 million in salary from January 2016 up until the end of June of this year, before he started working for the Export-Import Bank, said a financial disclosure form that was obtained by the website.

Though he works as communications director, Scaramucci is still listed on SkyBridge’s website as a managing partner.

A spokeswoman for SkyBridge said Scaramucci left the job as of Jan. 17, amid an ongoing sale to RON Transatlantic and HNA Group, a Chinese conglomerate, Politico reported.

Story continues below advertisement

That sale still hasn’t closed.

Sessions under fire

Scaramucci’s tweet also came as congressional Republicans and influential conservatives rallied around Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Wednesday, as President Donald Trump kept up his public pelting of the nation’s top law enforcement officer and left his future in doubt.

Sessions’ former colleagues in the Senate denounced the president’s broadsides against the first senator to endorse him.

Key forces in the conservative media, including Rush Limbaugh and Breitbart News, sharply criticized Trump’s broadsides. And even as Trump again turned to Twitter to rap Sessions, the White House suggested the attorney general should just press ahead with doing his job.

Coverage of Jeff Sessions on Globalnews.ca:

Story continues below advertisement

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said of Sessions that the president “wants him to lead the department.”

“Look, you can be disappointed in someone and still want them to continue to do their job,” she said during the daily briefing.

That sent a different signal than the seemingly daily barrage of negative tweets that Trump has aimed at Sessions, fueling speculation that the president is going to fire his attorney general or was pressuring him to quit.

READ MORE: Donald Trump keeps up public trashing of Jeff Sessions

Trump’s onslaught continued Wednesday with a tweet wondering why Sessions didn’t “replace Acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe,” whom the president characterized as a friend of fired former FBI director James Comey and an ally of Hillary Clinton.

McCabe has served as acting FBI director since Trump fired Comey in May. The president has been angry at McCabe for months, particularly after he highlighted the FBI’s work in the ongoing Russia probe and praised Comey during an appearance before Congress.

But Trump could have fired McCabe himself at any time from the acting director position. Trump’s pick to be the new FBI director, Christopher Wray, had his nomination approved by the Senate’s Judiciary Committee last week.

A day earlier, Trump repeatedly expressed regret over choosing Sessions for the Cabinet position and refused to say whether he’d fire him.

Story continues below advertisement

Sessions, who has privately told allies that he does not plan to resign, has not addressed the president’s criticism this week. But several Senate Republicans, many of whom had been previously reluctant to break with the president for fear of alienating conservatives loyal to Trump, spoke up on his behalf.

“Sessions is a very loyal man to the president. He stepped in front with him when no senator did,” said Alabama Sen. Richard Shelby.

Tennessee Sen. Bob Corker said: “I wish it would stop.”

South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham framed the president’s efforts to pressure Sessions to resign, instead of firing him, as “a sign of weakness.” Alabama Rep. Mo Brooks, who is running to fill Sessions’ old Senate seat, suggested all the candidates for the job drop out of the race so Sessions could run again if he chose.

And Maine Sen. Susan Collins agreed with a reporter’s question suggesting that if Trump were to fire Sessions, the president’s replacement pick might have a hard time being confirmed.

“I think the answer to that question is likely ‘yes’ but clearly it would depend on the person whom the president appointed,” Collins said. “But I hope we do not come to that.”

Story continues below advertisement

Limbaugh, the influential conservative talk radio host, said this week that “It’s also a little bit discomforting, unseemly, for Trump to go after such a loyal supporter this way.”

READ MORE: Donald Trump is ‘bullying’ Jeff Sessions, says Chuck Schumer

Tony Perkins of the conservative Family Research Council issued a statement in support. And several posts on Breitbart’s home page, a space usually dedicated to praising Trump, have been critical of the president’s treatment of Sessions, who is given credit for delivering on conservative pledges.

The attorney general visited the White House on Wednesday morning for a routine meeting that did not include the president. Some White House aides and Trump confidants have begun discussing how to move beyond Sessions, while others have urged the president to end the barrage of negative tweets.

Sessions continued carrying out his — and the president’s — agenda, saying Wednesday that he was reviewing the recommendations of a task force he assembled in response to Trump’s executive order on reducing violent crime.

And he is expected to fulfil a Trump wish by announcing next week stepped-up efforts to investigate leaks of sensitive information to the press, an official familiar with the matter said. The official was not authorized to discuss the effort publicly ahead of the formal announcement and did so on condition of anonymity.

Story continues below advertisement

Leak crackdown

The Justice Department moved Wednesday night to align with the White House’s leak crackdown, with spokeswoman Sarah Isgur Flores decrying what she said was an “astonishing increase” in the number of leaks that undermine national security.

She reiterated that the department would prosecute leak cases when possible and move to put leakers in prison.

 

 

  • With files from Jesse Ferreras

Sponsored content

AdChoices