Monday, April 29, 2019

April 26, 2019 REMARKS BY PRESIDENT TRUMP BEFORE MARINE ONE DEPARTURE

Office of the Press Secretary

REMARKS BY PRESIDENT TRUMP
BEFORE MARINE ONE DEPARTURE

South Lawn

 

9:21 A.M. EDT

     THE PRESIDENT:  So, I'm not allowed to comment on the new GDP numbers until about 10 or 15 minutes from now.  So, I will not comment on them.

     The country is always doing very well in every respect.  I mean, we're just doing well.  We're knocking it out of the park, as they say.  And we're very happy about that.

     We did not pay money for our great Otto.  There was no money paid.  That was a fake news report that money was paid.  I haven't paid money for any hostage.  And I've gotten approximately -- I think it's 20 or 21 out.  We don’t pay money for hostages.  The Otto case was a very unusual case.  But I just want to let you know no money was paid for Otto.

     Q    Mr. President, what did you tell Don McGahn about Mueller?

     THE PRESIDENT:  I never told Don McGahn to fire Mueller.  If I wanted to fire Mueller, I would have done it myself.  It's very simple.  I had the right to.  And frankly, whether I did or he did, we had the absolute right to fire Mueller.

     In the meantime, I didn't do it.  I'm a student of history.  I see what you get when you fire people, and it's not good.  But there would have been nothing wrong with firing him.  Legally, I had absolute right to fire, but I never told Don McGahn to fire Mueller.

     And, by the way -- and Mueller finished out his report: no collusion and no obstruction.

     Q    Mr. President, how do you beat Joe Biden?

     THE PRESIDENT:  I think we beat him easily.

     Q    Mr. President, measles cases are increasing.  What do you tell parents? 

     THE PRESIDENT:  Speak.  Up, up.  You got a heli- --

     Q    What do you tell parents about getting their kids vaccinated?

     Q    Measles.

     THE PRESIDENT:  Oh.  They have to get the shot.  The vaccinations are so important.  This is really going around now.  They have to get their shot.

     Q    Mr. President, how old is too old to be President?

     THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I think that -- I just feel like a young man.  I'm so young.  I can't believe it.  I'm the youngest person.  I am a young, vibrant man.

     I look at Joe -- I don't know about him.  I don't know.

     Q    Is he too old?

     THE PRESIDENT:  I would never say anyone is too old, but I know they're all making me look very young, both in terms of age and I think in terms of energy.  I think you people know that better than anybody.

     Yeah.

     Q    Mr. President, do you still think there were "very fine people on both sides" in Charlottesville?

     THE PRESIDENT:  Oh, I've answered that question.  And if you look at what I said, you will see that that question was answered perfectly.

     And I was talking about people that went because they felt very strongly about the monument to Robert E. Lee, a great general.  Whether you like it or not, he was one of the great generals.

     I have spoken to many generals here, right at the White House, and many people thought -- of the generals, they think that he was maybe their favorite general.

     People were there protesting the taking down of the monument of Robert E. Lee.  Everybody knows that.

     Q    On North Korea, Kim Jong Un has said that he wants Pompeo to not be part of negotiations and that a peace deal depends on the U.S. attitude.  What do you think about that?  And what's the prospects for talks with North Korea?

     THE PRESIDENT:  I think we're doing very well with North Korea.  A lot of progress is being made.  I appreciated President Putin's statement yesterday.  He wants to see it done, also.  

I think there's a lot of excitement toward getting a deal done with North Korea.  In the meantime, when I came here, there were nuclear tests, missile tests, rocket tests.  We got our hostages back.  We got remains back, and continue to come back from the war.  Our great heroes -- the remains.  There's been no tests.  There's been no nothing.  So, at some point, you're going to report the facts.

I have a great relationship with Kim Jong Un.  I appreciate that Russia and China is helping us.  And China is helping us because I think they want to.  They don’t need nuclear weapons right next to their country.  But I also think they're helping us because of the fact that we're in a trade deal, which, by the way, is going very well.

Q    Will you let Don McGahn testify?

THE PRESIDENT:  What we're doing is executive --

Q    Did Don McGahn lie to Mueller?

THE PRESIDENT:  So what we're doing -- in the history of our country, there has never been a President that's been more transparent than me or the Trump administration.  I let White House Counsel McGahn testify.  I let everybody testify.  I think McGahn --

Q    (Inaudible.)

THE PRESIDENT:  Excuse me.  I think McGahn was in there for 30 hours.  Who ever heard of such a thing?  But I said I want everybody to testify.  Obviously, McGahn thought he testified fine because he was with the administration for a long time after that.  And I think he said he was just joining up with respect to the appointment of judges by the administration.  But I let everybody testify.  There has never, ever been transparency like this.

So, just so you understand -- so we got a great --

Q    (Inaudible.)

THE PRESIDENT:  Excuse me.

We get the ruling, which I knew we were going to get because I have nothing to do with Russia and the campaign.  So we get a ruling: no collusion.  We essentially get a ruling -- no obstruction -- based on the fact our great Attorney General made an immediate decision there was no obstruction.  So, we have no collusion, no obstruction.  We had total transparency.

We gave 1.4 million documents, if you can believe such a ridiculous thing.  Five hundred people testified.  We had 18 people that were Trump haters; that includes Mr. Mueller.  He was a Trump hater.

Q    I'm talking about Congress, Mr. President.  Congress.

THE PRESIDENT:  And wait a minute.  Wait, wait.  Wait.

With all of this -- with all of this transparency, we finished "no collusion, no obstruction."  Right?  Then I get out, the first the day they're saying, "Let’s do it again."  And I said, "That’s enough."  We got to -- we have to run a country.  We have a very great country to run.

And, frankly, when I go through it with the House and the Senate and we have no collusion, no collusion, no obstruction, no obstruction.  Then we have -- again we have to go through it?  This is a pure political witch hunt.

We did nothing wrong.  And the only thing I did is make our country stronger, give it the numbers like people haven’t seen before.  What we're doing in this country, financially, with the military, with our veterans -- if you look at veterans, we now have Veterans Choice.  Nobody has ever done what I've done in their first two years.

So, if I'm guilty of anything, it's that I've been a great President and the Democrats don’t like it, which is a shame.

     I'm going to Indianapolis.  We're going to the NRA, and we look forward to it.

     Q    How do you beat Biden?  How do you do it?

     THE PRESIDENT:  I would say "easily." 


                              END                 9:29 A.M. EDT

 

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