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Another top aide leaves.
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Rob Porter, the now-former staff secretary at the White House, was given the benefit of the doubt when credible allegations he had physically abused his ex-wives emerged this week. Thatâs how deputy press secretary Raj Shah put it in his briefing to the press Thursday, a day after Porter tendered his resignation. Asked if the White House staffâs judgment was clouded when handling the allegations, Shah responded: âI think I'd point you to a number of statements that indicate that the White House was prepared to defend Rob Porter based on initial accusations that we heard about and his denial, and that was based on our experiences with Rob Porter.â
Shah also made an admission, rare for this administration, that the White House could have responded to the allegations differently. âI think itâs fair to say that we all could have done better over the last few hours, or last few days, in dealing with this situation,â said Shah.
Left unanswered by Shahâs briefing or by a Wedsnesday-night statement from chief of staff John Kelly that he was âshockedâ by the new allegations, is when, exactly, he and other senior White House officials learned about the allegations against Porter. âHe became fully aware about these allegations yesterday,â Shah said of Kelly. Pressed on what âfully awareâ meant, Shah noted Kelly had not yet seen the photographs of Porterâs first wife with a black eye, which were published Wednesday. Before then, Kelly had defended Porter from the accusations and even asked his West Wing colleague to stay on.
The beginning of an answer probably lies in the issue of Porterâs interim security clearance, issued to him and other White House employees at the beginning of the administration until the FBIâs background check could be completed. Shah claimed Thursday the background check had been âongoingâ and dodged multiple questions about when Kelly became aware of the allegations that had been holding up Porterâs clearance.
But two newspaper reports have more definitive answers. [The New York Timesreports]( the White House first learned about the red flag in Porterâs background check in August. âMr. Kelly has known about the allegations at least since last fall, according to officials who asked not to be named,â reads the Times. [And the Washington Post]( claims that White House counsel Don McGahn âknew one year agoâ about the allegations.
âWhen McGahn informed Kelly this fall about the reason for the security clearance holdup, he agreed that Porter should remain and said he was surprised to learn that the 40-year-old had ex-wives,â reports the Post.
Quote of the Dayâ âOmarosa was fired three times on The Apprentice, and this was the fourth time we let her go.â âRaj Shah, White House deputy press secretary, on former White House staffer Omarosa Manigault-Newman, who criticized the White House and the president on the (television) reality show in which she currently stars
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Friday is the first day of the Winter Olympic Games in PyeongChang, South Korea, where Vice President Mike Pence arrived Thursday to lead the American delegation. Speaking to U.S. troops in Japan Thursday, Pence made it clear that heâs unimpressed by the apparent newfound closeness between South Koreaâs government and Kim regime in North Korea.
âAs we speak, an estimated 100,000 North Korean citizens labor in modern-day gulags,â Pence said. âThose who dare raise their voices in dissent are imprisoned, tortured, and even murdered; their children and grandchildren routinely punished for their familyâs sins against the state.â
This yearâs Olympics have occasioned a remarkable thaw between the two Korean states, which have remained technically at war since the 1950s. The regimes began tentative diplomatic talks in January, later announcing they would field a joint delegation to the PyeongChang games. President Trump initially took credit for the improved relations in a [January 4 tweet.](
Pence seems determined not to let North Koreaâs rogue conduct be swept under the rug in a rush of optimism. His guest at the games, Fred Warmbier, is the father of American college student Otto Warmbier, who died last year after being detained and receiving brutal treatment in North Korea.
Trump Tweet of the Day
And Another OneâHereâs [a devastating report from Politico]( documenting years of sexual harassment allegations against Ed Crane, the founder and longtime president of the libertarian Cato Institute.
Weâve got two special guest speakers at this yearâs Weekly Standard Summit at the Broadmoor Resort in Colorado Springs: Special Report host Bret Baier of Fox News and Real Clear Politics columnist A.B. Stoddard. Get a chance to hear from them and the others in our lineup of speakers (including your humble White House Watch author) from May 17-20.
Learn more and sign up for the Summit [here](.
Must-Read of the Dayâ [âJimmy Buffett Does Not Live the Jimmy Buffett Lifestyleâ](
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2018 WatchâFrom the Washington Examiner: [âSebastian Gorka fully supports Danny Tarkanian (whose campaign paid Gorka $5,000)â](
Song of the Dayâ [âTheme For an Imaginary Westernâ by Mountain](
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