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US President Donald Trump later deleted the tweet. Photo: TNS

Donald Trump retweet of post naming alleged whistle-blower who sparked impeachment back on Twitter

  • On Friday night Trump shared a Twitter post from @surfermom77 with his 68 million followers naming the alleged whistle-blower
  • It disappeared by Saturday morning, but was restored later that day, apparently after a Twitter glitch
Donald Trump
US President Donald Trump retweeted a post naming the alleged whistle-blower who filed the complaint that became the catalyst for the congressional inquiry that resulted in his impeachment by the House of Representatives.

On Friday night, Trump shared a Twitter post from @surfermom77, who describes herself as “100% Trump supporter,” with his 68 million followers. That tweet prominently named the alleged whistle-blower and suggested that he had committed perjury.

By Saturday morning, Trump’s retweet had been removed. But late on Saturday it was restored and was again visible on Twitter on Sunday. The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

CNN reported that the temporary removal followed a Twitter glitch that affected certain accounts, and was not deliberate action to delete the tweet by Trump or someone with access to his Twitter account. “Due to an outage with one of our systems, tweets on account profiles were visible to some, but not others,” the social media site posted on its @TwitterSupport account.

For months, Trump has threatened to disclose the identity of the whistle-blower, complaining that he should be able to face his accuser. In the past few days, he has inched closer to doing so. On Thursday night, the president retweeted a link to a Washington Examiner story that used the name.

The alleged whistle-blower has also been named in other conservative media, including Breitbart News. He was named by a contributor on Fox News, and Donald Trump Jnr has tweeted the name.

The whistle-blower’s identity has been kept secret because of whistle-blower protection laws, which exist to shield those who come forward with allegations of wrongdoing by the government. Whistle-blower advocates say this anonymity is important, because it protects those who speak up from retaliation and encourages others to come forward.

The Washington Post has chosen not to publish the name. Vice-president for Communications Kris Coratti said The Post “has long respected the right of whistle-blowers to report wrongdoing in confidence, which protects them against retaliation. We also withhold identities or other facts when we believe that publication would put an individual at risk. Both of those considerations apply in this case.”

Trump asks Twitter followers to pray for him before impeachment vote

Trump and his allies claim the law does not forbid disclosing the identity of the whistle-blower. Federal laws offer only limited protection for those in the intelligence community who report wrongdoing, and those in the intelligence community have even fewer protections than their counterparts in other agencies.

The 1998 Intelligence Community Whistleblower Protection Act did not detail any protections for whistle-blowers from retaliation – instead merely describing the process to make a complaint.

Whistle-blower lawyer Bradley P. Moss told the The Post in September that the law does not apply to members of Congress who might disclose the whistle-blower’s name. “This is all very, very fragile, and a lot of the protections that we understand to exist are based more on courtesy and custom than anything written down in law,” Moss said.

Moss is the law partner of Mark Zaid, one of the whistle-blower’s lawyers, though he has had no involvement in that case.

US President Donald Trump speaks during a round table discussion on business and red tape reduction in the Roosevelt Room of the White House. Photo: AFP

The whistle-blower, who works for the Central Intelligence Agency, filed an official complaint that, among other concerns, pointed to a July 25 phone conversation in which Trump asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate former vice-president Joe Biden, a Democratic presidential candidate.

After several months of investigation, the House voted December 18 to impeach Trump on charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. The Senate will hold a trial, where the Republican-majority is expected to acquit, in early 2020, once House Speaker Nancy Pelosi transfers the articles of impeachment.

Congressional Republicans have demanded the whistle-blower testify as part of the impeachment probe. Democrats have countered that the whistle-blower’s testimony is unnecessary because other witnesses have corroborated and expanded on the original complaint, which was based on second-hand information.

The president has repeatedly disparaged the whistle-blower, though never by name, in tweets, interviews and rally speeches. In late September, Trump accused the whistle-blower’s sources of being “close to a spy,” adding, “you know what we used to do in the old days when we were smart? Right? With spies and treason, right? We used to handle them a little differently than we do now.”

Trump Jnr calls for tweet, phone barrage on Democrats over impeachment. Photo: Handout

In early November, the whistle-blower’s lawyer sent White House counsel Pat Cipollone a cease-and-desist letter, demanding the president stop denigrating the whistle-blower.

“I am writing out of deep concern that your client, the President of the United States, is engaging in rhetoric and activity that places my client, the Intelligence Community Whistleblower, and their family in physical danger,” wrote lawyer Andrew Bakaj. “I am writing to respectfully request that you counsel your client on the legal and ethical peril in which he is placing himself should anyone be physically harmed as a result of his, or his surrogates’, behaviour.”

The whistle-blower, who is reportedly still at his job, is driven to and from work by armed security officers when threats are elevated. Threats against him seem to spike whenever Trump tweets about him, The Post has previously reported.

The Twitter feed for Surfermom77, who identifies herself as “Sophia” on the social media site, is a daily stream of pro-Trump and anti-Democrat memes and propaganda. In 2016, the account shared the false conspiracy theory that President Barack Obama was Muslim.

In the days after Christmas, Trump retweeted more than a dozen posts from users affiliated with QAnon, the conspiracy theory that there is a “deep state” secretly plotting to take down Trump. The FBI has identified QAnon as a potential domestic terrorism threat.

On Saturday morning, former lawyer general Neal Katyal, a frequent Trump critic, reacted to Trump’s retweet, writing on Twitter: “Who would want to live in a country where its leader could just name the identity of a whistle-blower and invite retaliation against him? Despicable, un-American, and @MittRomney your country (and your Party) needs you now.”

Former Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill (Mo.), who sponsored whistle-blower protection legislation in the Senate, singled out another Senate Republican on Saturday, tweeting at Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, who co-founded the Senate Whistleblower Protection Caucus and has authored and co-authored many of the nation’s whistle-blower protection laws. “@ChuckGrassley where the hell are you?” McCaskill tweeted. “We worked hard on whistle-blower protections. I thought your desire to protect and defend whistle-blowers was in your bones. Was I wrong? What happened to you?”

Additional reporting by Bloomberg

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Trump retweets then deletes name of ‘whistle-blower’
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