Sen. Ted Cruz joined the list of Republican lawmakers who have argued President Donald Trump had legitimate reasons to ask Ukraine to investigate the 2016 election because that country "blatantly interfered in our election."
The Texas conservative said on NBC News' "Meet the Press" that there was "considerable evidence" Ukraine meddled in the 2016 election, though he could only point to one op-ed from a former ambassador to the U.S. as proof of Ukrainian interference.
Cruz accused the news media of being "misleading" by acting as if only Russia or Ukraine interfered in 2016 when it could have been both or more nations.
"Of course Russia interfered in our election. Nobody looking at the evidence disputes that," Cruz said. "But here's the game the media is playing. Because Russia interfered, the media pretends nobody else did."
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During the 2016 election, many Ukrainians and several officials expressed concern about then-candidate Trump's positive words for Russian President Vladimir and an interview in which he indicated he would consider recognizing Putin's military annexation of Crimea.
Host Chuck Todd told Cruz an op-ed and expressions of policy concerns were of an entirely different magnitude from Russia's interference, which former special counsel Robert Mueller's report called a "sweeping and systematic" effort in Trump's favor that included sophisticated cyberattacks and a massive social media campaign.
"You’re trying to make them both seem equal. I don't understand that," Todd said.
Despite Cruz's assertion, Trump has expressed doubt about Russian election meddling on several occasions. And Trump has continued to promote the same discredited theory he referenced in his July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky that says Ukraine, and not Russia, stole emails from the Democratic National Committee and Clinton campaign.
Cruz said the news media wanted to "dismiss Ukrainian interference because, A: they were trying to get Hillary Clinton elected, which is what the vast majority of the media wanted, anyway, and B: it's inconvenient for the narrative."
He said after reporting on Ukrainian interference two years ago, the news media now "clutches their pearls" and cries, "Oh, my goodness. You can't say that."
Last week, Todd had a heated exchange over the same issue with Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., who also insisted "both Russia and Ukraine meddled in the 2016 election."
Todd had asked Kennedy if he was concerned he had been duped as part of a Russian disinformation campaign because former National Security Council official Fiona Hill had warned lawmakers at an open hearing in the impeachment inquiry last month that the idea that Ukraine, and not Russia, was behind 2016 election interference was a "fictional narrative that has been perpetrated and propagated by the Russian security services themselves."
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Kennedy had retracted a previous claim that Ukraine and not Russia had been behind the DNC hack.
The Democratically-controlled House is currently preparing articles of impeachment against Trump for allegations he used military aid as leverage to get Ukraine to open a probe into the 2016 election and an energy company with ties to former Vice President Joe Biden's son, Hunter.
Democrats say both investigations were intended to help Trump politically, but Cruz, Kennedy and other Republicans argue Trump had legitimate concerns on both counts.
Trump took notice of the defense mounted by Cruz, thanking him in a tweet, and retweeting several other posts, headlines and clips referencing his "Meet the Press" performance.
On Sunday, Todd asked Cruz about a New York Times report that said U.S. intelligence officials had briefed senators that Russia had engaged in a "yearslong campaign to essentially frame Ukraine as responsible for Moscow’s own hacking of the 2016 election."
"I have been in multiple briefings, year after year after year, about foreign interference in our election. Russia has tried to interfere in our elections. China's tried to interfere in our elections. North Korea's tried to interfere in our elections. Ukraine has tried to interfere in our elections. This is not new. 2016's not the first year they did it. And they're going to keep trying," Cruz said.
Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., is another lawmaker who has said Russians and "also, Ukrainians tried to interfere."
But other Republican senators have rejected their colleagues' effort to equate Russian and Ukrainian election interference.
"There’s a big difference between pulling for someone and hoping someone wins in the American election and interfering the way that Russia did," Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, told the Times.
Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., told CNN that the actions of some Ukrainian officials were "not even in the same universe" as Russia's campaign, which was directed by Putin and included the country's military intelligence services.