OnPolitics Today: White House defends Trump posting sketchy videos, citing a "real" threat
Donald Trump rails almost daily about "fake news," but the White House on Wednesday seemed to say it was fine for the president to spread potentially false information — so long as it helps his goals.
Trump posted a series of anti-Muslim videos that morning from Britain First, an anti-immigration fringe group widely condemned in the United Kingdom. The unverified clips claim to show Muslims beating people and smashing a statue of the Virgin Mary.
White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders couldn't say whether the videos were real.
"Whether it's a real video, the threat is real," she told CBS News' Major Garrett. "His goal is to promote strong border security and strong national security."
Also on Wednesday: The president tried to link MSNBC host Joe Scarborough to a woman's death and vaguely suggested heads of NBC should be investigated for so-called "fake news," which he's of course against.
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Alleged harasser Donald Trump rips on alleged harasser Matt Lauer
Trump blasted an array of people Wednesday, including Matt Lauer, the "Today" show host fired after allegedly exposing himself to a woman. Trump, himself accused of sexually harassing several women, lambasted Lauer on Wednesday while calling for the investigations of executives over NBC.
Trump later mused whether NBC would fire Scarborough over "the 'unsolved mystery' that took place in Florida years ago." He seemed to refer to the 2001 death of one of the former congressman's staffers, the subject of Internet conspiracy theories despite an examiner's report explaining her death.
Trump insults North Korea's leader as nation eyes U.S. attack
North Korea launched a missile Wednesday likely capable of reaching Washington. Trump taunted the nation's leader a day later, calling him "a sick puppy" during a visit to Missouri. The rogue nation seems primed to easily hit the East Coast with missiles, but most analysts think it can't do so with nuclear warheads aboard — yet, anyway. Here's what the U.S. might do on North Korea, including sanctions, missile defense and war.
Republicans begin tax reform debate. Many have questions.
A party-line vote let Republicans force a floor debate on a huge tax overhaul on Wednesday. The biggest sticking point: Deficit-weary lawmakers want a "trigger' to automatically slash taxes or spending if the bill can't jumpstart the economy — a necessary development to make up for the bill's lost revenue. Wednesday's vote is just a first step. Democrats will likely aim to slow down the bill, which they say aids only big corporations and the rich.
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