Remarks by President Trump in Press Gaggle Aboard Air Force One | Eastern North Carolina Now

Press Release:

    Aboard Air Force One  •  En Route Fargo, North Dakota  •  September 7, 2018

    THE PRESIDENT: (In progress.) Are you good? I heard your voice yesterday. It's a moving - it's a powerful, moving voice.

    Q (Inaudible.)

    THE PRESIDENT: It was under a wing and you can't - you can't miss it. Did you like it last night?

    Q Yes, I had a great time. Mr. President, how is China tariffs going?

    THE PRESIDENT: I think it's going really well. It's going really well.

    Q Okay. Anything you can tell us on the record about it?

    THE PRESIDENT: We're looking at $200 billion more, if you know that. It's in the hopper. We'll see what happens.

    Today's report was fantastic. And something really great for our country: Wages up 2.9. Nobody has seen that in a long time. The wage situation is incredible. That was an incredible report. Over 200,000 - the number. Over 200,000, and 2.9 percent up in wages. That was a fantastic story, a story that has not been told in a long time. That's what I've been trying to get to. That, to me, is one of the most important things - not for Wall Street, but for the people and the country.

    Q Are you going to get a - Canada a trade deal today?

    THE PRESIDENT: Canada is moving along. We'll see what happens. Mexico is a done deal. We're just (inaudible) it. Canada is moving along. And we'll see what happens.

    I mean, look, everybody wants to deal with us. We never had a President that dealt, because they didn't know how to deal, frankly. And these deals that were made - NAFTA was one of the worst trade deals ever in history. World Trade Organization deal, that's the - that goes down - to me, that goes down as the number one.

    But the second-worst trade deal ever made was NAFTA. And we're making it - actually, taking it out of NAFTA, doing a brand new trade deal. It's not NAFTA any longer. But we're making a fair deal to the people of the United States. We lost so many jobs. We lost millions of jobs with NAFTA. We lost so much. And the farmers have done very poorly with NAFTA. So we're opening up markets and we're making new deals.

    And now, let's see what happens with Canada. We'll probably know over the next two days.

    Q What are you going to do to find the author of this op-ed piece?

    THE PRESIDENT: Well, I think it's a disgrace that somebody can do that. And I think it's more disgraceful that the New York Times would do it.

    But that somebody is allowed to do that is - it's very sad commentary. I will say - just in watching this morning, briefly - so many people that never said a good thing about me are now saying that should never happen. They've actually gone to my side. I think it's reverberating in a very different way.

    Q Do you have -

    THE PRESIDENT: Because, you know - you know, one of the problems is this: I don't mind criticism. I handle it and I fight back, I guess you've noticed over the years. But here's criticism where you can't fight back because you have somebody doing it anonymously. Doesn't seem to be anybody very high up, because everybody very high up has already said, "It wasn't me." It would be very hard if it was, and they got caught, to make the statements that they've made.

    Q Do you have -

    THE PRESIDENT: But I will say - I will say this: For somebody to do that is very low, and, I think, journalistically, and from many different standpoints, and maybe even from the standpoint of national security. We'll find out about that. For the New York Times to allow that to happen is disgraceful.

    Q Do you -

    THE PRESIDENT: Because you don't know who it is, therefore you really have a one-way conversation. And I don't want it.

    So I can say that Woodward - Woodward's book is a total fraud. Which it is, it's a total fraud. I don't talk that way. You people know me, I don't talk that way. I can't get up and talk in front of a crowd - many times without notes - for an hour and twenty-five minutes and get the biggest crowds in the history of politics. Because this is not like what you saw last night - that place was packed. And you're in Billings. And all over the country, you don't see an empty seat. You don't get up and do that because you don't know how to think or talk. You can only do that if you're at a very, very high level.

    So, the book that was written was fiction. I don't speak that way. I'm highly educated and always did well. Always did well, no matter what I did. Whether I was in show business - I was in show business. I had "The Apprentice." It was one of the top shows on television. No matter what I did - before that, I was a businessman. I was great at business. And then I tried politics. And I started off as President, and guess what happened? I won.

    The book was just total fiction. Disappointing, but when I went I went back and did research on Woodward after the book - I guess it comes out soon - I did a little research; Bush had the same problems, and Obama had the same problems (inaudible).

    But that book was total nonsense. And when General Mattis and General Kelly and Sarah and everybody else come out and totally disavow everything that they said in the book - and others too, by the way - you see the list of people - it's hard to believe you can allow somebody to get away with it.

    And frankly, I'll say it again: Our libel laws should be tough enough so you can't do that. Our libel laws are pathetic. Our libel laws should be toughened up, so if somebody writes things that are fraudulent and false, they get sued and they lose. We should do that.

    Q Do you think Jeff Sessions should be investigating who the author of the op-ed piece was or (inaudible)?

    THE PRESIDENT: I think so, because I think it's national security. Yeah. I would say Jeff should be investigating who the author of that piece was because I really believe it's national security.

    Q And is there action that should be taken against the New York Times? (Inaudible.)

    THE PRESIDENT: Well, we're going to see. I'm looking at that right now.

    Q (Inaudible.)

    THE PRESIDENT: It only happened yesterday, right? But I'm looking. I am looking.

    Q You said last night that it's treason, what happened. In this country, we can punish treason with the death penalty. Are you serious about that?

    THE PRESIDENT: We're going to take a look at what he had, what he gave, what he's talking about - also where he is right now. Supposing I have a high-level national security meeting, and he has got a clearance - I know we talked about clearances a lot, recently - and he goes into a high-level meeting concerning China or Russia or North Korea or something, and this guy goes in. I don't want him at those meetings. So, we're going to see what happens. We're looking at it very strongly from a legal standpoint.

    By the way, yesterday was a very interesting statement, as you saw, from North Korea. Had a very positive statement. Unfortunately, you know, people don't cover it or you only cover the negative statements. But that was a very positive statement, what he said about me. And also what he said about - he wants to denuclearize during the Trump, you know, administration.

    That was a very positive - there's never been a more positive statement coming out of North Korea. And honestly, I didn't see it on the front page of your papers.

    Q (Inaudible) you and Rudy are saying you're not willing to answer questions to Mueller about obstruction? Because it has never (inaudible) hiding something?

    THE PRESIDENT: Well, let me just tell you, David. Number one, there is no obstruction. Number two -

    Q (Inaudible.)

    THE PRESIDENT: Wait, wait, wait. Listen. Because everybody that looked at anybody over there, they get them on some kind of a lie. I see Papadopoulos, today, is going to - I don't know Papadopoulos. I don't know him. I saw him sitting, in one picture, at a table with me. That's the - that's the only thing I know about him. I don't know him. But they got him on - I guess, a couple of lies, is what they're saying.

    Flynn - where the FBI said he didn't lie, but Mueller's people said he did lie. So, I don't want to be set up with a perjury trap, number one. Number two, there was no obstruction and there was no collusion.

    Now, one of the things that was interesting about this ridiculous book: He hardly covered collusion at all. Now that's his business, covering that kind of a thing. In fact, I figured it was going to be some kind of a fictitious book having to do with collusion. But there was none.

    There was no talking to Russia. There was no phone calls. I didn't make phone calls to Russia. I didn't receive phone calls. I didn't have meetings. I didn't have texts. I didn't have anything. I've nothing to do with Russia. Nothing to do with Russia.

    So - so I think that if we're going to meet, it's got to be a fair meeting. Remember this: Article 2. Number one, you have Article 2 provision. That covers everything. But despite Article 2, there was no obstruction and there was no collusion.

    Now, they've practically found that there is no collusion. They've given up - everybody has given up on collusion because I didn't meet with Russians because I love the United States. I didn't meet with Russians. Frankly, I was focused on the campaign. And, you know, if I met with Russians, you know who would have found out? You people would have found out because you know everything I'm doing. You don't always report it correctly, but that's okay. I'm used to it.

    But - didn't meet with the Russians, had nothing to do with Russians. There is no collusion. And the interesting thing about the book - I figured it'd have chapters of nonsense - he couldn't find anything about collusion. In that big, fat, ugly book, with all the misquotes and all the lies, he didn't have about collusion.

    Q (Inaudible) do an interview, Mr. President?

    THE PRESIDENT: Yeah, I mean, I'd do it under certain circumstances. I think it's a big waste of time because there was no collusion.

    Q (Inaudible.)

    THE PRESIDENT: Honestly, it's such - it's such a sad thing for our country to be going through a witch hunt like that. It's so hard for us to deal with other countries, including Russia, because of that witch hunt. It endangers our country. It really endangers our country. It puts us at a big disadvantage all because of the rigged, phony witch hunt.

    Now, you have 17 angry Democrats. Now they're making it smaller. I guess they've - they've given up on the collusion stuff. But it's - and you have people that are highly conflicted, highly conflicted. Why don't we have some Republicans on it?

    Q (Inaudible.)

    THE PRESIDENT: It is - it is so - it is so egregious, when you look at all of these Democrats, people that were top of the line, people that were at Hillary Clinton's - I call it "Hillary Clinton's funeral." That was the night she lost the election. It was a funeral. It was a wake.

    People that are on Mueller's team were there, crying. They were crying as she lost. What kind of - what kind of a probe is that? Now, that - all that being said, I must tell you, again, I'm not the target of an investigation. You do know that. Nobody wants to put that. I'm not the target of an investigation.

    But still, it's not right. When you have people that go to her victory party-slash-funeral, and you have those people looking at anybody having to with it, I think it's very unfair.

    With that being said, we have to get it over with. It's really bad for the country. It's really unfair for our midterms. Really, really unfair for the midterms. This thing should have been over with a long time ago.

    I watched Jim [John] Dowd - a very good guy, a very good lawyer - and he was devastated because he thought - and he kept giving me dates - he thought this would be over. And he's a - he's a great lawyer. He thought this would have been over many months ago, and he was devastated by it.

    Q Do you think Gary Cohn would actually take a memo off your desk? Is he (inaudible)?

    THE PRESIDENT: No, I - he never took - he never took a memo off my -

    Q How did Woodward get it?

    THE PRESIDENT: Gary Cohn, if he ever took a memo on my desk off of my desk, I would have fired him in two seconds. He would have been fired so fast. Gary Cohn never took a memo off my desk. If he did, he would have been fired within the first second that it took place.

    Q Is it (inaudible) -

    THE PRESIDENT: Now, let me just - let me just say -

    Q - they're doing things you don't know?

    THE PRESIDENT: Let me just tell you, the deal that you're talking about is the South Korea deal. I completed the deal after Gary Cohn left. It's completed. We're probably going to sign at United Nations week, in a couple of weeks.

    But the deal is completed. It was a horrible trade deal made by Hillary Clinton that was supposed to give us 150- to 200,000 jobs. And she was right, it did give 150- to 200,000 jobs. You know where it gave them? To South Korea. Okay? It was a horrible deal.

    I terminated the deal. I made a new deal. It's a great deal. We like it. Now it's a great deal. It went from a bad deal to a - really, a good deal. I did that not because of Gary Cohn; I did that because of me.

    I'm working on Canada now. You know, people can say, oh, I'm too tough on Canada. Look, Canada has been ripping us off for a long time. And now, they've got to treat us fairly. I don't want to do anything bad to Canada. I can; all I have to do is tax their cars. It would be devastating. If I taxed cars coming in from Canada, it would be devastating. But I don't want to do that.
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