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Social media guru: Facebook video is the best ad buy for your money right now

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Social media guru Gary Vaynerchuk speaks at the 2017 SXSW Conference and Festivals.

If you want to get the word out about your business on a budget, you should consider putting your money and time into publishing Facebook video ads.

That’s according to Gary Vaynerchuk, founder of VaynerMedia, an 800-employee digital marketing company that works with Fortune 500 companies like General Electric, Budweiser, Toyota, Revlon and Unilever. He’s a best-selling author and has more than 3.5 million fans across his social media channels.

« When you are David and you are playing against Goliath, you have to do David tactics. And our little slingshot with a rock right now is Facebook ads, » said Vaynerchuk, speaking at the SXSW Conference and Festivals in Austin, Texas. Facebook ads can be run by zip code which helps target a very specific audience, he says.

« When you are David and you are playing against Goliath, you have to do David tactics. And our little slingshot with a rock right now is Facebook ads. »
-Gary Vaynerchuk, founder of VaynerMedia

« The under-priced tactic in the market for everybody here — B to B, B to C, start-up, Fortune 50 — the under-priced attention to the target that you are looking for as we stand here today is Facebook video, » says Vaynerchuk.

You don’t need to have a large budget to produce videos, either. You can start with a smartphone, says Vaynerchuk.

The entrepreneur helped grow his parents’ wine business from $3 million in annual revenue to $60 million by launching a web show, which became so popular Vaynerchuk appeared on NBC’s « Late Night With Conan O’Brien » to teach the host about wine. Still, he says he looks back and can only think about how he could have grown the business even faster if he had invested in the best advertising for the value, which, at the time, was Google adwords.

« When I stand up here and say I built my dad’s store from $3 to $60 million, I always feel that it should have been $250 million, because what I didn’t do was spend all my money on Google adwords in 2001, ’02 and ’03, » says Vaynerchuk. He knew doing so would have been smart, but he didn’t « realize how historically amazing » those rates were at the time.



Gary Vaynerchuk:


Facebook video right now is what Google adwords were in the early 2000s, Vaynerchuk says.

« We are paying $6 to $13 CPM [cost per thousand impressions] on Facebook right now that are going to be $50 to $80 in 36 and 48 months and everybody is going to be sad that they didn’t jump on it, » says Vaynerchuk.

Vaynerchuk clarifies that the most efficient marketing is not necessarily the cheapest. « The Super Bowl commercial is the best deal in marketing. Like, not even close. At $6 million a pop, a steal! » A good Superbowl commercial is worth between $20 and $40 million, he says. Meanwhile, digital banner ads and pre-roll ads that run before online videos are the « worst s— ever, » he says.

« I am an attention-ist, » he says. « I just look at prices. »

In addition to targeted Facebook video, Vaynerchuk says that having influencers, or individuals with lots of followers on Instagram, promote your brands is also « really grossly under-priced awareness right now. »

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UK to question Google after advertisements appear alongside extremist videos


google advertisements, UK to question google over advertisements, government advertisements appear alongside extremist group videos, extremist group hate speech videos,  Prime Minister Theresa May, tech news, indian express news  Britain will question executives from Google over why advertisements marketing the govt’s services were appearing alongside videos carrying hate speech and extremist content on its YouTube website. (File Photo) 

Britain on Friday will question executives from Google over why adverts marketing the government’s services were appearing alongside videos carrying hate speech and extremist content on its YouTube website. A spokesman for Prime Minister Theresa May said Google would be attending a meeting at the Cabinet Office later on Friday after the Times newspaper reported that public sector adverts were appearing alongside videos carrying homophobic and anti-semitic messages. The spokesman said the government had suspended its advertising from YouTube. “We are waiting for reassurances that they have in place the technical expertise to stop our adverts appearing in the wrong places,” he said.

Other organisations, such as retailers Sainsbury’s and Argos and the Guardian newspaper, said they had also withdrawn their advertising. “It is completely unacceptable that Google allows advertising for brands like the Guardian to appear next to extremist and hate filled videos,” a Guardian spokeswoman said. “We have stopped all advertising through Google with immediate effect until we receive guarantees that ?this won’t happen in the future.”

Google said in a statement it worked hard to remove ads from appearing on pages or videos with “hate speech, gory or offensive content” and said it had launched a review to give brands more control over where their ads appeared. “With millions of sites in our network and 400 hours of video uploaded to YouTube every minute, we recognise that we don’t always get it right,” it said in a statement. “In a very small percentage of cases, ads appear against content that violates our monetization policies. We promptly remove the ads in those instances, but we know we can and must do more.” Google added that it believed in the freedom of speech and expression on the internet, even when it did not agree with the views expressed.

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Is Live Video the Future of Content Marketing? – CMSWire


Live video marketing has tangible benefits for brands, marketers and consumers. PHOTO: Pexels

In the weeks leading up to the launch of Facebook Live, reports circulated that Mark Zuckerberg was “obsessed” with live video. The fact that Zuckerberg pushed out live video on Facebook and Instagram within months of each other speaks to the truth in that story.

The leaders of Twitter followed by launching their own Periscope-powered live video feature in late 2016.

But what is it about live video that’s making social media giants clamber towards it with such haste? And more to the point, what does this all mean for content marketing?

Benefits of Live Video Marketing

According to research compiled by Twitter, live streaming an event increases brand favorability by 63 percent.

Twitter acquired Periscope in 2015 for $86 million.

Furthermore, 80 percent of Livestream’s survey respondents prefer live video from a brand to social posts. In other words, the contemporary consumer is thirsty for live video.

The reasons for that thirst is no mystery. On the contrary, live video marketing has some tangible benefits for brands, individual marketers and consumers themselves.

Live Video Is Accessible

If you have a smartphone, you can go live to the world right now.

There are no technical requirements, and better yet, there’s no need to spend hours preparing the content — a point which I will prove later in this article.

Live Video Is Personal

Perhaps the greatest aspect of live video is its unique ability to cut through the forced professionalism and rehearsed facades we see in so many other content marketing mediums.

When you’re live, there’s no time to plan your next sentence, and there’s no script to help you handle questions and comments as they roll in. It’s just you — the real you.

Live Video Is Interactive

Live video empowers marketers to interact with their audience in a way that no other medium allows.

For example, you can take a question live on air from the comments section, answer it and then partake in some back and forth discussion with the questioner as the world watches on.

This enhanced level of engagement isn’t just great for attracting more social media comments, it also helps create a stronger and more personal bond between the streamer and the audience.

Live Video Evokes Urgency

There’s something about a live stream on social media that makes me want to tune in and stay watching — even if the streamer isn’t somebody I typically pay much attention to.

The numbers also prove that I’m not alone in this, as studies show that people spend 3X longer watching live video compared to video that is no longer live.

Live Video Can Be Ephemeral

Live video has all the benefits of being ephemeral (à la Snapchat) without actually having to disappear once the live fun stops.

Other than Instagram, all major social media platforms continue showcasing your videos on your feed long after the stream ends. Thus, there’s nothing to stop you from taking those previously live streams and using them for further content marketing later on.

You can transcribe them into blog posts, chop them up into small videos for YouTube or extract a small clip for your homepage.

Live Video Marketing Examples

Live video marketing may be the future, but it’s also the present. Here are some examples of live video working for content marketers today.

Enterprise Marketing With Live Video

Turkish Airlines became the first airline to broadcast a flight live on Periscope, giving viewers a sneak peek in the cockpit and other areas of the plane. According to Twitter’s case study, the live feed reached 4.5 million people and received 290,000 Periscope likes.

Turkish Airlines attracted 5,000 new followers with one Periscope live stream.

Car manufacturing giant General Motors also leveraged live video when it unveiled the first ever Chevrolet electric car at CES 2016. More than 57,000 people tuned in, resulting in just under 2,000 Facebook likes.

These two live video marketing campaigns perfectly exemplify the way live video can be used with very little preparation or investment. Both the Turkish Airlines flight and the Chevrolet presentation were going to happen anyway — the two brands simply set up a smartphone to stream it all.

Personal Branding With Live Video

Two big players in the personal branding space have made live video an integral part of their marketing strategies.

Tony Robbins, the self-improvement and business mentor, regularly appears on Facebook Live with the likes of Business Insider and Arianna Huffington.

According to a Robbins, “Facebook Live is one of my favorite tools at this stage. We get three-quarters of a million people [watching]. It’s like having your own show.”

Gary Vaynerchuk, the founder of VaynerMedia, is also an advocate for live video. He records many of his Ask Gary Vee shows on Facebook Live, with some episodes gathering over 450,000 viewers. Vaynerchuk also dabbles in impromptu QA sessions on Instagram Live.

From a personal branding perspective, live video marketing makes absolute sense. It further strips away any inauthenticity, promotes dialogue and makes the viewer feel closer to the streamer.

Where Are the Streams?

As previously mentioned, major social media platforms have high hopes for live video. But as usual, each one is approaching the trend in its own way.

If you’re looking to launch a live video marketing campaign, here are the most intelligent places to host your live feeds

Facebook Live

“[In a] few years from now, the vast majority of the content that people consume online will be video.“

That’s what Mark Zuckerberg claimed in 2016 at the Mobile World Congress, and just a few months later, his two platforms (Facebook and Instagram) were hosting live streams.

Today, Facebook’s algorithm looks favourably upon live video — which likely has something to do with the fact that Facebook users comment 10X more on live videos than they do on regular videos. As a result of this high engagement rate, Facebook recently announced that ads are coming to Facebook Live.

Snapchat

The unique role of Snapchat marketing in the enterprise space is now way too big to ignore.

Although you can’t technically go live on Snapchat, the app offers a unique halfway-house between live video and traditional video. Plus, the fact that Snapchat users share 9,000 snaps every second is reason enough to experiment with it.

Instagram

With well over 600 million users, Facebook-owned Instagram is definitely worth streaming on.

Instagram borrowed (read: stole) its “Stories” feature from Snapchat, and then proceeded to go a step further by letting users stream live video that disappears once the stream ends. That makes it the only major platform to offer ephemeral live video by default.

YouTube

Although YouTube is the oldest video sharing platform on this list, it’s showing no negative signs of ageing.

In fact, internet surfers now watch more than 1 billion hours of YouTube video every single day.

As the mack daddy of the video scene (and, since it’s owned by Google), YouTube serves up three distinct ways to go live — providing more flexibility than all its live streaming competitors.

  1. Stream Now: the fastest way to go live via YouTube from a desktop machine.
  2. Event Streaming: if you want to live stream an event, this option gives you greater control of the live stream. For example, you can preview before you go live and configure backup redundancy streams.
  3. Mobile Streaming: this live streaming option is most comparable to the offerings of Facebook and Instagram. After a mobile live stream ends, an archive of the stream is saved to your channel and you have the option to edit the privacy setting (including setting it to private) or delete the archive.

Twitter

Twitter is still struggling with its abuse and algorithm issues — but its $86M acquisition of the live streaming app Periscope has fused the two apps together to give Twitter users a faster way to start live streams. Like Facebook Live, Periscope allows for permanent playback after a live stream ends.

Furthermore, Twitter and its partners created 600 hours of live video content from a total of 400 events in the last quarter of 2016 — an indication that Twitter is gambling on live video to pull it out of the rut it finds itself in.

Content Marketing 2.0

Live video disrupting the content marketing scene in a way we haven’t seen in years — and thus, it’s ushering in the era of content marketing 2.0.

Gary Vaynerchuk hosting a live QA on Facebook Live.

In this new era of content marketing, the consumer is in love with video that’s live, interactive and authentic.

It’s no longer enough to sit a CEO down in a well-lit studio to answer vetted questions with scripted answers. Today, good video content is live and spontaneous engagement sessions with your customers via Facebook Live. It’s giving the world a behind-the-scenes peek of your head office on Periscope. It’s documenting your entire corporate event on Snapchat.

Most importantly, it’s about connecting with your audience in the moment — as humans always have.

And here’s the kicker: unlike blog posts and pre-recorded webinars, over-preparation with regards to live video is a bad idea. Instead, live video performs best when it’s used to casually expose the raw personality of a brand in its natural habitat.

Don’t get me wrong, good old fashioned words will always be relevant — but a good content marketing strategy now absolutely requires live video.

EMT killed in the Bronx after man steals ambulance, runs her over as partner watches (GRAPHIC VIDEO)

An FDNY emergency medical technician and mother of five was killed and her partner was injured in the Bronx Thursday when a man stole their ambulance and ran over one of the first responders, officials said.

EMT Yadira Arroyo, 44, a 14-year veteran of the FDNY, died at Jacobi Medical Center, where her partner, EMT Monique Williams, 31, was treated for minor injuries, sources said.

“They were acting very bravely, they certainly wanted to continue on their way to the call,” FDNY Commissioner Daniel Nigro said after meeting with Williams and Arroyo’s families at Jacobi.

The nightmare unfolded in Soundview around 7:10 p.m. when the pair realized that a man was riding on the back bumper of their ambulance as they responded to a call about a pregnant woman, officials said.

Getaway driver in Bronx mugging suspected of robbing strippers

Witness Anis Nagi, 40, said he and others flagged down the ambulance when they saw the man riding on the back.

Emergency staffers attend to the EMTs struck by an ambulance in the Bronx.

Emergency staffers attend to the EMTs struck by an ambulance in the Bronx.

(SwavyJayBeats via Twitter)

Police are seen at a Bronx intersection where two EMTs were struck by their ambulance. 

Police are seen at a Bronx intersection where two EMTs were struck by their ambulance. 

(SwavyJayBeats via Twitter)

The ambulance drives onto a sidewalk after striking two EMTs in the Bronx. 

The ambulance drives onto a sidewalk after striking two EMTs in the Bronx. 

(SwavyJayBeats via Twitter)

The deranged joyrider — identified by sources as Jose Gonzalez — jumped off and tried to steal a backpack from a 21-year-old, sources said. The medics pulled over and tried to help.

“The female EMT came out of the vehicle,” Nagi said. “She left the door open.”

The 25-year-old Gonzalez started to walk away, but then turned back and went around Arroyo to the cab of the ambulance and got into the driver’s seat, officials said.

Getaway driver in Bronx mugging suspected of robbing strippers

“This person had no business being in this ambulance,” Nigro said.

The ambulance is seen on Watson Ave. in the Bronx as police investigate the incident Thursday. 

The ambulance is seen on Watson Ave. in the Bronx as police investigate the incident Thursday. 

(Sam Costanza for New York Daily News)

As the emergency medical workers struggled with the man on both sides, the vehicle throttled backward — knocking Arroyo down.

“He reversed so hard and she was dragged,” Nagi said. “He ran over her and she went under the wheels.”

Video of the horror shows the ambulance backing up into a green taxi before lurching forward, the driver’s side door ajar, and cutting across traffic.

Bronx man hit with stun gun may go blind in one eye

Arroyo can be seen being dragged beneath the wheels of the massive vehicle for at least 15 feet.

FDNY EMT Yadira Arroyo was struck and killed when a man commandeered her own ambulance on Thursday. 

FDNY EMT Yadira Arroyo was struck and killed when a man commandeered her own ambulance on Thursday. 

(FDNY)

The ambulance then turned onto Watson Ave., slammed onto the sidewalk and hit a parked car, officials said.

The EMT’s motionless body was left in the middle of the street.

A second video shows the stunning aftermath of the carnage.

Gonzalez, who sources say has a lengthy criminal record, was tackled by passing MTA Officer Daniel McCabe and a group of good Samaritans, police said. “He was incoherent and talking to himself,” a source said.

Mayor de Blasio, with FDNY Commissioner Daniel Nigro (second right) and FDNY Chief of the Department James Leonard (far right), address the media at Jacobi Medical Center on Thursday. 

Mayor de Blasio, with FDNY Commissioner Daniel Nigro (second right) and FDNY Chief of the Department James Leonard (far right), address the media at Jacobi Medical Center on Thursday. 

(Sam Costanza for New York Daily News)

Williams wailed in horror over her partner’s body before being restrained by cops as she tried to kick the man who killed her colleague.

Nancy Montavo, an office manager, said the screams will haunt her. “She was screaming, ‘my partner, my partner!’ She was screaming hysterically. I can’t forget her screaming,” Montavo said. “All the police came running and they put her in an ambulance.”

Mayor de Blasio rushed to Jacobi Medical Center Thursday night.

De Blasio said Arroyo was “lost in the line of duty, bravely doing her job, encountering the kind of danger our EMTs should not have to confront.”

NYC PAPERS OUT. Social media use restricted to low res file max 184 x 128 pixels and 72 dpi

The stolen ambulance is seen at this Bronx intersection on Thursday. One EMT was killed and another injured when a thief stole their ambulance and drove over them.

(Andrew Savulich/New York Daily News)

Arroyo, who was assigned to Station 26 in Morrisania, is the eighth member of EMS killed in the line of duty, officials said.

Gov. Cuomo tweeted, “EMTs are heroes who help countless New Yorkers every day. Tonight’s tragedy in the Bronx is horrible. My deepest sympathies to the family.”

Gonzalez was taken into custody and was being questioned at the 43rd Precinct.

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Sean Spicer’s angry, lonely defense of Trump’s wiretapping claim, annotated

 

Things got very contentious in the White House briefing room Thursday afternoon, as press secretary Sean Spicer was confronted with the bipartisan doubts of congressional leaders about Trump’s claims that President Barack Obama wiretapped him.

At one point, Spicer spent several minutes reading through a list of reports that he felt bolstered Trump’s claim. Journalists, meanwhile, pushed back on the evidence Spicer provided, none of which addressed Trump’s central claim that Obama was behind the alleged surveillance of Trump Tower, and some of which came from dubious and/or ideologically tinged sources such as Sean Hannity.

Below is the transcript, with our annotations. To see an annotation, click on the yellow, highlighted text.

We’ll pick things up right after Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney appeared to talk over the budget, and focus on only the parts about wiretapping.

SPICER: Jonathan Karl?

QUESTION: So, Sean, the day before yesterday, you said you were extremely confident that the House and Senate Intelligence Committees would ultimately vindicate the president’s allegation that Trump Tower was wiretapped. As I’m sure you have now seen, the Senate Intelligence Committee has said they see no indications Trump Tower was the subject of surveillance. That seems to be a pretty blanket statement. What’s your reaction?

SPICER: Well, I think there are several things, I would also — it’s — its interesting to me that you know, just as a — as a point of interest that when — when one entity says one thing that — that proves, that claims one thing, you guys cover it ad nauseam.

When Devin Nunes came out and said, ‘I think it’s very possible,’ yesterday, there was crickets from you guys. When Devin Nunes came out and said there was no connection that he saw to Russia, crickets. When Tom Cotton said the same, you don’t wanna cover this stuff — no, no, hold on…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: …on no evidence…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: No, actually…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: …now you’ve had the House Intelligence Committee and the Senate Intelligence Committee…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: No, no, actually here’s his quote, Jonathan, no here’s the direct quote, “I think it’s very possible,” end quote. That’s what he said when he said the president’s communications could’ve been swept up in collection.

So again, I…

QUESTION: He said there was no — I saw no indication of a wire tap…

(CROSSTALK) SPICER: I understand that, and I think — and I think the president’s been very clear when talks about this, and he talked about it last night. So we talked about wire tapping, he meant surveillance and that there have been incidents that have occurred. Devin Nunes couldn’t have stated it more beautifully.

But you choose not to cover that part. You chose not to cover when Tom Cotton went out, when Richard Burr went out, when others, Chairman Nunes and others and said that there was no — hold on…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: …Intelligence Committee take…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: Yeah I — no, I understand that, Jonathan. And where was your passion and where was your concern when they all said that there was no — no connection to Russia? Where was it then? You — crickets, from you guys, because at the end of the day, when — no, no, no, no, no, hold on, hold on, I’m — hold on, hold on…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: …tower?

SPICER: I’m making a point. The point is this, number one, that it’s interesting how when evidence comes out and people who have been briefed on the Russia connection come out and say that there was nothing that they have seen that proves a connection, you choose not to cover that, you don’t stop the narrative.

You continue to perpetuate a false narrative. When he came out yesterday and said quote, “I see no evidence that this happened.” When he said quote, “I think it’s very possible,” like I said, we should know — you don’t cover that part.

You only cover the part — but let’s go through what we do know, okay? Hold on, hold on, let me — and I’m trying to answer your question, Jonathan, if you can calm down.

If you look at [inaudible] on January 20 — 12th, 2017, they said quote, “In its final days, the Obama administration has expanded the power of the National Security Agency to share globally intercepted personal communications with the government’s 16 other intelligence agencies before applying privacy protections. The new rules significantly relax long-standing limits on what the NSA may do with the information gathered by its most powerful surveillance operation, which are largely unregulated by wire tapping laws.”

When Sarah Carter reported that by the start of the New Year, brought with it unexpected politicizing of the intelligence gathered in secret. Separately, the Obama administration amended a long-standing executive order, allowing information intercepted through FISA warrants or by the National Security Agency to be shared by a wider audience and 16 government agencies as Obama was leaving offices.

Intelligence normally reserved for just a handful of intelligence leaders was spread throughout briefings, of — to scores of workers and soon, leaks began appearing in news media organizations, often in stories lacking context of how national security investigations are actually concluded. On March 3rd, Fox News chief anchor Bret Baier said the following, quote, “There was a report in June 2016, a FISA request by the Obama administration forwarding intelligence surveillance court to monitor communications involving Donald Trump and several other campaign officials. Then they got turned down, then in October, then they renewed it into a start up wire tap at Trump Tower with some computer and Russian banks.”

Baier continues, “A June FISA request that foreign intelligence surveillance courts get shot down. A judge says,” — hold, Jonathan, I’m gonna — you can ask, you can follow-up. “A judge says no go to monitoring Trump Tower, they go back in October, they do get a FISA granted. This is wire tap going on in a monitoring of computers that has some ties they believe to Russian counts.

By all accounts, they don’t come up with anything in the investigation, but the investigation continues and we don’t know it.”

On November 11th, 2016, days after the election, Heat Street reported, quote, “Two separate sources with links to the counter intelligence community had confirmed to Heat Street that the FBI saw and was granted a FISA warrant in October, giving counter surveillance intelligence permission to examine the activities of U.S. persons and Donald Trump’s campaign with ties to Russia.

“The first requests, which sources say named Trump, was denied back in June. But the second was drawn more narrowly and granted in October after evidence was presented of a server, possibly related to the Trump campaign and its alleged links to two banks, SVB Bank and Russia’s Alfa Bank.

“Sources suggest, that a FISA warrant was granted to look at the full context of related documents that concern U.S. person. Two separate sources with links to the counter intelligence community have confirmed that the FBI saw it and was granted a FISA warrant in October, giving counter intelligence permission to examine the activity of U.S. persons and Donald Trump’s campaign with ties to Russia.”

They go on: “The FISA warrant was granted in connection with the investigation of suspected activities, between the server and two banks. However, it is thought that the intelligence community that the warrant covers any U.S. person connected to this U.N. investigation. And thus covers Donald Trump and at least three further men, who have either formed part of his campaign or acted as immediate surrogates.”

On January 19th, the New York Times reported the following, “American law enforcement and intelligence agencies are examining intercepted communication and financial transactions as part of a broad investigation into possible leaks between Russian officials and associates of president-elect Donald J. Trump.

One official said, “Intelligence reports based on some of the wiretapped communications have been provided to the White House. It is unclear what Russian official is under investigation or what particular conversations caught the attention of American eavesdroppers. The legal standard for opening these investigation is low.”

Andy McCarthy, writing in National Review suggested quote, “From three reports from The Guardian, Heat Street and the New York Times, it appears the FBI has concerns about a private server in Trump Tower that was connected to one or two Russian banks.”

Heat Street describes these concerns as centering on quote “possible financial — and banking offenses.” I — this is his quote — “I italicized the word offenses because it denotes crimes. Ordinarily when crimes are suspected, there is a criminal investigation, not a national security investigation.”

We go on. Sara Carter from the Circa reporting, “Intelligence professionals tell Circa News they were concerned that some of the Russian intelligence was spread through group briefings to a much larger than usual audience back in January. This would have happened during the final days of the Obama Administration, when it expanded Executive Order 12333, which allows and plays with a quote ‘need to know’ and further unfettered access to broad data stowed by the NSA.

“The new rules allow the NSA to share — quote — ‘raw signals intelligence information, including the names of those involved in phone conversations and emails. The expansion of the order makes it difficult to narrow on the leaks and, frankly, it allows too many people access to the raw data, which only used to be available to a select few,’ said a U.S. official who spoke on the condition of anonymity and was not granted to be speak on the authority.”

Numerous outlets including the New York Times have reported on the FBI investigation into Mr. Trump’s advisers, BBC and Lynn McCarthy revealed the existence of a multi-agency working group to coordinate investigations across the thing.

On February 14th, the New York Times again refers to phone records and intercepted calls — let me quote them, “American law enforcement intelligence agency intercepted the communications around the same time they were discovering the evidence that Russia was trying to disrupt the presidential election by hacking into the Democratic National Committee, three officials said.” “The intelligence” Russia — “the intelligence agencies then thought to learn whether the Trump campaign was colluding with the Russians on hacking or on other efforts to influence the election. The officials interviewed in recent weeks said that so far, they’ve seen no evidence of such cooperation.”

“The official said that the intercepted communications were not limited to Trump campaign officials and other associates of Mr. Trump.” “The call logs and intercepted communications are part of a larger trove of information that the FBI is sifting through.”

Days later, the New York Times then reports, quote “In the Obama administration’s last days, some White House officials scrambled to spread information about Russian efforts to undermine the presidential election of Donald Trump, connections between the president-elect and Russians across the government.”

But the increasingly hard to escape conclusion that in our government that — individuals in our government were instead trying to undermine the new president by saying quote — this is the New York Times again — “At intelligence agencies, there was a push to process as much raw intelligence into possible analysis to keep the report at relatively low classification levels, to ensure a widespread leadership across the government.” And in some cases — quote — “among them European allies. This allowed the upload of as much information — intelligence that was possible to Intellipedia, a secret wiki used by American analysis to share information.”

Sean Hannity went on Fox to say, quote, “But protections which are known as minimization procedures have been put in place to protect Americans that are not under warrant,” American citizens that are caught up in the surveillance. And quote, “By the way, their identities are protected. Their constitutional rights — are to be protected. Now of course, this was not the case with Lieutenant General Flynn, because we know a transcript of this call was created and then given to intelligence officials, who then leaked this information, which is a felony, to the press that printed it,” end quote.

Last on Fox News, on March 14th, Judge Andrew Napolitano made the following statement, quote, “Three intelligence sources have informed Fox News that President Obama went outside the chain of command. He didn’t use the NSA, he didn’t use the CIA, he didn’t use the FBI and he didn’t use the Department of Justice. He used GCHQ. What is that? It’s the initials for the British intelligence finding agency. So, simply by having two people saying to them president needs transcripts of conversations involving candidate Trump’s conversations, involving president-elect Trump, he’s able to get it and there’s no American fingerprints on this. Putting the published accounts and common-sense together, this leads to a lot.”

QUESTION: So Sean, are you saying…

SPICER: So, John…

QUESTION: …that despite the findings, the bipartisan findings of the Senate Intelligence Committee —

SPICER: No, they’re not findings. They’re two — there’s a statement out today. They have not begun this. As you know, yesterday or two days ago, the Department of Justice asked for an additional week. So they — the statement clearly says that at this time, that they don’t believe that. They have yet to go through the information. The Department of Justice, as you know, has not supplied this.

But I just read off to you — it’s interesting. When the New York Times reports…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: Hold on, hold on.

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: … that whole long answer…

SPICER: Thank you. Appreciate it.

QUESTION: okay. So, are you saying that the president still stands by his allegation that President Obama ordered wiretapping or surveillance of Trump Tower despite the fact that the Senate Intelligence Committee says they see no indication that it happened?

SPICER: But…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: Does the president still stand by the allegation?

SPICER: First of all, he stands by it, but again, you’re mischaracterizing what happened today. The Senate…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: I understand that. And at the same time, they acknowledge that they have not been in contact with the Department of Justice. So — but again, I go back to what I said at the beginning. It’s interesting…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: Hold on, hold on. It’s interesting how at the same time, where were you coming to the defense of that same Intelligence Committee and those members when they said there was no connection to Russia? You didn’t seem to report it then. There was no — no, no…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: … so you want — you want a comment and you want to perpetuate a false narrative when…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: … report that Clapper said that. I…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: But when those individuals have gone out time and time again; when Chairman Nunes has said, number one, that there was no information that he’s aware of that that existed, that got zero reporting.

Number two, when he went out yesterday and said, quote, “I think it’s very possible,” you don’t include that in the question mark.

The bottom line is that the president said last night that he would be providing — that there would be additional information coming forward. He’s — there’s a ton of media reports out there that indicate that something was going on during the 2016 election.

And I think it’s interesting, where was the questioning of the New York Times or these other outlets when that was going on? Where was the questioning…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: I believe he will.

Jim?

QUESTION: Yeah, you were just quoting Sean Hannity there. The House and Senate Intelligence Committees are quoting…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: I also quote — I get you’re going to cherry pick…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: … the FBI director. You’re citing Sean Hannity…

SPICER: No, no, no. okay. You also look over — you also tend to overlook all of the other sources, because I know you want to cherry pick it. But — no, no… (CROSSTALK)

SPICER: … but — but you do. But where was your concern about the New York Times report? You didn’t seem to have a concern with that.

QUESTION: We have done — I’ve done plenty of reporting on all of this…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: No, no, but you want to cherry pick one…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: … these connections between the…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: … one commentary — one piece of commentary.

QUESTION: … associates of the president to the Russians. That has all been looked at and…

SPICER: No, but how do you know all this? The — the — how do you seem to be such an expert on this?

QUESTION: I’m saying that this has been looked at, Sean…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: How do you know it’s been looked at?

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: Hold on, hold on. Where is — I’m sorry — I’m afraid — to understand — where — can you tell me how you know that all of this has, quote, “been looked at”?

QUESTION: You’re asking me whether or not…

SPICER: You made a statement. You said, quote, “all of this has been looked at.”

QUESTION: … other outlets have reported…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: No, no. So, okay, so we’re — so when your outlet says it’s all been looked at…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: … to the president and the Russians during the 2016 campaign. It sounds like during the context of that investigation, there might have been some intercepted communications. The House Intelligence Committee chairman did mention that. And we have reported that. Others have reported that — [inaudible] and various publications.

But Sean, what you are refusing to answer — the question that you are refusing to answer is whether or not the president still believes what he believes…

SPICER: No, I’m not. I just said it to Jonathan. I didn’t refuse to answer that.

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: … you have a Senate and House Intelligence Committee both leaders from both parties on both of those panels saying that they don’t see any evidence of any wiretapping. So how can the president go on and continue to…

SPICER: Because that’s not — because you’re mischaracterizing what Chairman Nunes said. He said, quote, “I think it’s possible” — he is following up on this. So to suggest that…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: And you’re stating unequivocally that you somehow…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: … literally, you said if you…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: Right. And I think that we’ve already cleared that up. And he said exactly that. But the president has already said clearly, when he referred to wiretapping, he was referring to surveillance. So that’s…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: So that’s…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: … sounds like, though, Sean, that you and the president are saying now, “Well, we don’t need wiretapping anymore; that’s not true anymore…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: No, no…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: So now we’re going to [inaudible] other forms of surveillance. What’s it going to be next?

SPICER: No, no, that’s not — Jim, I think that’s cute, but at the end of the day, we’re talked about this for three or four days. What the president had to, quote, “wiretapping,” in quotes, he was referring to broad surveillance. And now you’re basically going back. We talked about this several days ago.

The bottom line is that the investigation by the House and the Senate has not been provided all of the information. And when it does — but where was the concern…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: … hold on. I just…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: … not evidence…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: No, no. What I — I think the president addressed that last night, said there’s more to come. These are merely pointing out that I think there’s widespread reporting that throughout the 2016 election, there was surveillance that was done on a variety of people. That came up…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: … investigation going on as to whether there was contact between the president’s campaign and the Russians…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: Jim, I find it interesting that you — you somehow believe that you…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: … of course, they’re going to be looking at these various…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: okay. okay. I get it. Somehow, you seem to believe that you have all of this information. You’ve been read in on all of these things, which I find very interesting.

QUESTION: I haven’t [inaudible] by the FBI…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: Well, no, you’re coming to some serious conclusions for a guy that has zero intelligence…

(CROSSTALK)

(LAUGHTER)

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: Well, give me some credit…

SPICER: I’ll give you some…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: … a little intelligence maybe. But no…

SPICER: Clearance. I wasn’t done. Clearance.

QUESTION: …those two — those two panels…

SPICER: Maybe both.

QUESTION: Well, come on.

(LAUGHTER)

QUESTION: Those two panels have spoken with the FBI director and I was…

SPICER: I — I understand that…

QUESTION: …told there’s no evidence of this.

SPICER: okay I — I think this question’s has been asked and answered…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: … just have the president say he was wrong.

SPICER: It’s interesting how you jump to all of these conclusions about what they have, what they don’t have and you seem to know all the answers. But at the end of the day, there was clearly a ton of reporting…

QUESTION: A week from now…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: Hold on, Jim, let me answer — no, I — I think that there’s been a — a vast amount of reporting which I just detailed, about activity that was going on in the 2016 election. There was no question that there was surveillance techniques used throughout this.

I think by — by a variety of outlets that have reported this activity concluded. So and I think when you actually ask those two people whether or not and as Chairman Nunes said yesterday, when you take it literally in wire-tapping, the president’s already been very clear that he didn’t mean specifically wire tapping, he had it in quotes.

So I think to fall back on that is a false — is a false premise, that’s not what he said. He was very clear about that when he talked about it yesterday, major.

QUESTION: Sean?

QUESTION: okay Sean, so just to be clear, you’re good and the president’s good with stories that have anonymous sources in them?

SPICER: No, it’s interesting, I think when it comes to the Russia story and the on-the-record sources who have been briefed by the FBI continue to conclude that there’s nothing there. You guys continue to fall back on these anonymous sources and perpetuate a false narrative.

And yet, when it comes to us talking about all these reports in there, you then criticize anonymous sources. No, it’s just interesting, this — this sort of — the double standard that exists when it comes to us citing stories when it comes to — and then how you intend to use them.

QUESTION: So let me ask you what — what the president said last night. He was asked by Tucker Carlson, you’re in charge of the various intelligence apparatus that report to you…

SPICER: Right.

QUESTION: …you can ask them…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: You can, he would be getting…

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: …can I ask my question?

SPICER: Yeah.

QUESTION: He said he was reluctant to do that.

SPICER: Right.

QUESTION: So lemme just put two things together. Earlier this week, you told us when asked, has the president directed the Justice Department to collect and distribute information to the various relevant congressional committees? If I remember your answer correctly, it was…

SPICER: That’s right.

QUESTION: …no we hadn’t given that specific directions. Has that changed, has he now directed the Justice Department…

SPICER: No.

QUESTION: …and is he asking himself, or the intelligence agencies that report to him, to provide him specific answers to these underlying questions that are separate from the reportages… SPICER: No.

QUESTION: …you’re citing?

SPICER: No.

QUESTION: Why not?

SPICER: Because I think we’ve covered this before, I think that gets into interfering this and I think that the appropriate process is to allow the House and the Senate to do it so that it doesn’t appear as though we’re interfering — I understand that.

But as I’ve — I mentioned to you this the other day, Major, if we go at them then you’re gonna turn around and say you guys interfered with something and you pressured them. It’s a catch-22 for us, and the bottom line is, is that I think the president made a clear two Sundays ago that he wanted the House and the Senate Intelligence Committee to work with these agencies to collect the information and make a report.

That’s what we’re doing. In — in order to make sure that there’s a separation from us, so that you can’t turn around and then accuse us of — of forcing or pressuring an agency to produce a document. We’re asking them to go through the process of — of this separation of powers and actually going to those different entities, the Department of Justice said yesterday they want an additional week. And we’re allowing that process to play through.

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: Sean?

SPICER: Got it, Abby?

QUESTION: Sean?

QUESTION: Sean, I got a follow-up…

QUESTION: Did the president make any statements based on classified information?

SPICER: I’m not gonna get into what the — how the president makes a decision. I think that what I think is clear though, is through the reporting that I just read is if there’s clearly widespread open-source material pointing to surveillance that was conducted during the 2016 election.

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: …information is available to members of the House and the Senate is public, as you noted. They are looking at [inaudible] information…

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: No, no, no, they have — no, no, that’s not true.

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: …evidence to back up the president’s claims. So if there is other information, why won’t the president release…

SPICER: Again, I’m not gonna get into that yet. I think the president discussed that last night on — on his interview and we’ll let the process play out. I understand what he discussed, I think they have — they have — they have clearances in the House and the Senate intelligence committees. They’re able to conduct this.

Alexis?

QUESTION: Sean, I’d like to ask you about two topics, but can you help us all by calling on Peter right now?

(LAUGHTER)

SPICER: No I’m gonna — I understand — I actually call the question. Alexis, if you don’t an answer to your question, I can call on somebody else.

(CROSSTALK)

SPICER: No, thank you.

 

QUESTION: You keep going back to the fact that the president used wiretap in quotes, and last night he said it was very important that it was in quotes. But out of the four tweets where he accuses Barack Obama of wiretapping him, he only used quotes in two of them. In two of them he specifically said that he tapped his phones. He didn’t use the term wiretapping.

And just minutes ago you said it was communications being swept up. So can you definitively say that he still feels like Barack Obama wiretapped Trump Tower? Or does he feel like it was broadly surveilled? Which is it?

SPICER: Look, he was very clear about this last night. He talked about it as you said.

QUESTION: He wasn’t clear about it …

SPICER: Yeah, he was. He said that he meant it, he put it in quotes, it was very broad, and so that’s what he meant by the use of the term.

QUESTION: So was it phone tapping?

SPICER: No, it was surveillance and I think we’ve covered this like 10 times.

QUESTION: But it hasn’t — there’s no specific answer what it was. What President Obama do…

SPICER: …I understand that but that’s the point of them looking into this, Caitlyn. I think the idea is to look into this, have the House and Senate Intelligence Committees look into this and report back.

QUESTION: So I want to follow up on that. If all of this comes out and there’s no proof that President Obama had any role in any wiretapping, that there was no wiretapping, will President Trump then offer an apology?

SPICER: I’ve had this like three times this week and I think the answer is, we’re not going to prejudge where the — where this — where the outcome of this is. We’ve got to let the process work its will and then when there’s a report that comes out conclusive from there, then we’ll be able to comment. But to jump ahead of this process at this point would be inappropriate.

Capitol Hill Republicans not on board with Trump budget

Some of President Trump’s best friends in Congress sharply criticized his first budget Thursday, with defense hawks saying the proposed hike in Pentagon spending wasn’t big enough, while rural conservatives and others attacked plans to cut a wide range of federal agencies and programs.

The bad mood among Republican critics was tempered by a consensus that the president’s budget wasn’t going very far on Capitol Hill, where lawmakers reminded everybody that they ultimately control the nation’s purse strings.

“While we have a responsibility to reduce our federal deficit, I am disappointed that many of the reductions and eliminations proposed in the president’s skinny budget are draconian, careless and counterproductive,” Rep. Hal Rogers (R-Ky.) the former chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, said in a statement. “We will certainly review this budget proposal, but Congress ultimately has the power of the purse.”

“We’ve not had our chance yet,” he added in an interview.

Rogers was one of several GOP lawmakers to dismiss Trump’s budget as a pie-in-the sky wish list with little hope of surviving negotiations in Congress. Most Republicans gave passing support to Trump’s general goal of increasing defense spending while reducing costs elsewhere in the budget. But none of the Republicans interviewed would embrace the specific White House blueprint.

“I’ve never seen a president’s budget proposal not revised substantially,” said Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa). “As a member of the Budget Committee, I’ll carefully scrutinize and assess priorities as the president has with his proposal.”

The upcoming budget clash between Congress and the president has emerged as another obstacle in Trump’s young presidency. Just this week, a federal judge in Hawaii issued a sweeping freeze of Trump’s latest travel order.

The House GOP plan to revise the Affordable Care Act is embattled, as is Trump’s push to build a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border. His tax reform and infrastructure plans have yet to get off the ground.

As he passes the halfway mark of his first 100 days, Trump is under increasing pressure to show that he can make good on his ambitious promises.

Some of Trump’s closest allies said his budget has virtually no chance in Congress, pointing to what they expect to be vociferous opposition from Democrats.

“The left is not going to let him decrease nondefense discretionary to the extent that he wants to,” Rep. Raúl R. Labrador (R-Idaho) told reporters on Thursday. “We’re going to have to find a different way to balance the budget.”

It is not uncommon for Congress to disagree with some priorities in a White House budget. But the blueprint risks putting GOP lawmakers on a collision course with Trump over demands for spending cuts they cannot deliver. Even those fiscal conservatives who do want to cut spending don’t necessarily think slashing major domestic programs is the answer.

In the past, the White House has worked directly with congressional leaders to agree on an overall spending number for the whole government, which is then passed to Appropriations Committee members to divvy up among different departments and agencies.

White House budget director Mick Mulvaney defended the president’s proposal on Thursday, acknowledging that the next challenge will be to sell it to lawmakers.

“The message we’re sending to the Hill is, we want more money for the things the president talked about, defense being the top one, national security,” he said. “And we don’t want to add to the budget deficit. If Congress has another way to do that, we’re happy to talk to them about it.”

One reason for the tepid response on the Hill is lawmakers are mired in high-level negotiations to craft an interim budget before the current one expires on April 28. Talks so far have centered on sticking to the two-year bipartisan spending agreement with an overall spending level of $1.07 trillion for 2017.

Republicans expect the spending targets for 2018 to stay about the same, according to several aides familiar with the negotiations.

Trump has proposed spending more next year — upward of $1.15 trillion — by tapping into a separate war fund account as well as other funds.

Many lawmakers also want to increase spending, but doing so would require a bipartisan agreement. Republicans have a slim 52-to-48 majority in the Senate, and any spending deal will require support from Democrats who will not back increased defense spending without corresponding hikes in domestic spending.

Democrats and some Republicans are worried that the $54 billion hike in defense spending will cripple the operations of 18 other federal agencies — most prominently the Environmental Protection Agency and the State Department.

Several Republicans also said they were wary of the deep cuts Trump proposed for foreign aid.

“As General [Jim] Mattis said prophetically, slashing the diplomatic efforts will cause them to have to buy more ammunition,” Rogers said, referring to the defense secretary. “There is two sides to fighting the problem that we’re in: There is military and then there’s diplomatic. And we can’t afford to dismantle the diplomatic half of that equation.”

Rogers predicted the foreign aid cuts “will not stand,” adding: “This too shall pass.”

Conservatives are also skeptical that Trump’s budget will significantly reduce the deficit. The only way to accomplish that, they argue, is to overhaul entitlement programs like Social Security and Medicare. Those programs, along with other mandatory spending, help make up nearly two-thirds of all federal spending while Trump’s proposal only targets a third of it.

But Trump promised during the campaign that those programs, including Medicaid, would not be touched.

“I can tell you that I brought up entitlement reform [with Trump] a week or so ago, [and] the pushback was a little stronger than I expected,” said Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.), chairman of the House Freedom Caucus. “It’s going to take a lot more encouragement in terms of actually tackling entitlement reform.”

Republicans also worried that some of Trump’s cuts would undermine critical environmental programs in their states. Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) said he plans to oppose major cuts to the $300 million Great Lakes Restoration Initiative.

“I’m committed to continuing to do everything I can to protect and preserve Lake Erie, including preserving this critical program and its funding,” Portman said in a statement.

The same could be said for Republicans from rural and agriculture-heavy states that stand to lose big under Trump’s proposed cuts. House Agriculture Committee Chairman K. Michael Conaway (R-Tex.) raised concerns that farmers could be hit hard at a time when farm income is already down 50 percent compared with four years ago.

Agriculture cuts are a particularly sensitive issue because periodically lawmakers spend months, if not years, hammering out the details of a comprehensive farm bill.

“Agriculture has done more than its fair share,” Conaway said in a statement. “The bottom line is this is the start of a longer, larger process. It is a proposal, not THE budget.”

One of the greatest pockets of opposition to the Trump blueprint can be found among defense hawks. Defense and national security programs would see the biggest boost in funding under the president’s budget.

But these military-minded members are not satisfied, accusing the president of everything from accounting gimmicks to playing fast and loose with the lives of soldiers in war zones to follow through on his campaign promises.

Republicans have long contended that defense cuts introduced during the last administration damaged the military and hampered its war readiness. Many supported Trump’s call for a dramatic increase in military investment — but they don’t believe this goes far enough.

“The Administration’s budget request is not enough to repair that damage and to rebuild the military as the president has discussed,” House Armed Services Committee Chairman Mac Thornberry (R-Tex.) said in a statement, noting “serious shortcomings” that “will worsen without immediate action.”

“It is morally wrong to task someone with a mission for which they are not fully prepared and fully supported with the best weapons and equipment this nation can provide,” he added.

Trump’s budget puts $603 billion toward defense — but Thornberry and Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John McCain (R-Ariz.) are both asking for $640 billion.

They also stress that the $54 billion proposed by Trump is misleading because it is only $19 billion more than what the country spent on defense last year — a rise of just 3 percent.

Senate Intelligence Leaders Offer Broad Pushback On Trump Surveillance Claims

A view of Trump Tower, March 7, 2017, in New York City.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images


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Drew Angerer/Getty Images

A view of Trump Tower, March 7, 2017, in New York City.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Updated March 16, 2:45 p.m. ET

The Republican and Democrat leading the Senate investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election appeared on Thursday to counter White House claims that there may have been surveillance of some sort on Trump Tower around the campaign, even if there was not specific wiretapping as President Trump said in a tweet nearly two weeks ago.

« Based on the information available to us, we see no indications that Trump Tower was the subject of surveillance by any element of the United States government either before or after Election Day 2016, » Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., and Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., said in a joint statement on Thursday.

The White House has asserted in recent days that when President Trump tweeted that « Obama had my ‘wires tapped’ in Trump Tower, » he was referring to various surveillance measures available to the U.S. government.

In a Fox News interview on Wednesday night, Trump said « wiretap covers a lot of different things. » Trump also said in the interview that he expects « some very interesting items coming to the forefront over the next two weeks. »

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif. (right), holds a news conference with ranking committee member Adam Schiff, D-Calif., Wedneday about their investigation of Russian influence on the American presidential election.

J. Scott Applewhite/AP


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J. Scott Applewhite/AP

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif. (right), holds a news conference with ranking committee member Adam Schiff, D-Calif., Wedneday about their investigation of Russian influence on the American presidential election.

J. Scott Applewhite/AP

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes said on Wednesday he doesn’t believe « there was an actual tap of Trump Tower, » but the statement from the Senate intelligence leaders represents broader pushback.

Asked to weigh in on wiretapping on Thursday, House Speaker Paul Ryan said, « We’ve cleared that up. That — that we’ve seen no evidence of that. »

Trump has not produced any evidence to back his assertion. White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer said this week that, « I think there is significant reporting about surveillance techniques that have existed throughout the 2016 election. » « I think he feels very confident that what will ultimately come of this will vindicate him, » Spicer said, referring to the president.

The top Democrat on the House committee, Adam Schiff, told NPR’s All Things Considered on Wednesday « there’s no evidence » to support Trump’s claim. Schiff says the question will remain: « Why would the president do this? And that’s a question the president will have to answer. »

Speaking at a Capitol Hill news conference on Wednesday, Nunes, a Republican from California, said:

« President Obama wouldn’t physically go over and wiretap Trump Tower. So now you have to decide, as I mentioned to [the press] last week, are you going to take the tweets literally? And if you are then clearly the president was wrong. But if you’re not going to take the tweets literally and there is a concern that the president has about other people, other surveillance activities looking at him and his associates — either appropriately or inappropriately — we want to find that out. »

FBI Director James Comey is likely to face questions about whether the agency obtained a warrant to wiretap Trump Tower at a House committee hearing on March 20. Nunes and Schiff confirmed NSA Director Mike Rogers will appear along with Comey at the hearing.

Trump Administration Asks For More Time To Provide Proof That Obama Wiretapped Trump

'You're Stuck With Me,' FBI Director Says, Citing No Plans To Leave Job

Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, chairman of a Senate judiciary subcommittee investigating Russia, is also expecting some answers. In an interview on NBC’s Today show, Graham threatened to subpoena the Department of Justice to force officials to reveal whether they have been investigating the Trump campaign.

Graham said the Senate will also hold up the nomination of Rod Rosenstein, Trump’s pick for deputy attorney general, until Congress is provided with information « to finally clear the air as to whether there was ever a warrant issued against the Trump campaign. »

Graham and Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, the subcommittee’s ranking Democrat, sent a letter to Comey two weeks ago asking him to provide the information by Wednesday.

The former president’s office has denied the charge. Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper has said he knew of no warrant to wiretap Trump.

Graham says he knows of no evidence of such a warrant but added that he is now « getting concerned, because it’s taking so long to answer my letter. » The House Intelligence Committee had asked the Department of Justice to provide evidence backing up the president’s claim by March 13. Nunes and Schiff now say they expect an answer by March 20.

Attorney General Sessions To Recuse Himself From Any Trump Campaign Investigations

Michael Flynn Resigns As Trump's National Security Adviser

Intelligence officials have concluded that Russia employed cyberattacks during the presidential campaign intended to hurt Hillary Clinton and aid Trump.

Nunes said it is possible that conversations Trump campaign officials had with Russia were captured in surveillance of Russian officials, such as contact between former national security adviser Michael Flynn and Russia’s ambassador to the U.S. Nunes expressed concern that such surveillance was leaked for political motivation and is asking for more information on such surveillance from the intelligence community.

Video marketers can now create videos with studio quality thanks to the power of Lets Animate 3

2016 witnessed a surge in the popularity of video as a content marketing format. Recent studies have shown that 77 percent of people was convinced to buy a product after watching a video, 91 percent of businesses planned to increase their spending on video in 2016, and 72 percent of companies said video had improved their conversion rate. If marketers do not already have a video marketing strategy in place for their website and social media, they are missing a tremendous opportunity to reach and engage with their audience.

However, the studies have also pointed out that 61 percent of consumers were hesitant to buy a product after watching a bad explainer video. When marketers decide to create video for their content, it must be done right. Marketers can reach improved conversion rate when they create a professional video but not some flat slideshow video with some random music. This was the time when Reza April released his product called Lets Animate to help marketers with their video production.

People can find the detailed features inside Lets Animate Vol 3 package review and demo.

Lets Animate 3 is a full package that includes both the character animation and background illustration with studio quality. It is a new product that will make user’s video marketing life. Inside this package, Reza April will show his followers how to create an engaging video to draw their customer’s attention.

Let us now have a closer look at some features of Lets Animate V3:

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Lets Animate is a powerful animation tool that improves the quality of marketer’s video. The package provides a lot of characters with different nationalities, races, occupation, and gender. The creator of Lets Animate 3 has made it flexible enough as they give it in standard GIF, SWF (Action Script 3.0) as well as high-quality transparent PNG in order to run with professional software such as Adobe After Effect.

The package includes 14 different characters with 30 unique animations each. Moreover, the animation format will be transparent GIF, MOV, SWF and PNG Sequence. Users can also use the 10.000 static PNG sequence images anywhere as static images.

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Concerned reader may find more detailed information in Lets Animate 3 Review and Bonus.

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