WASHINGTON (AP) — A woman impersonated the wife
of a GOP lawmaker and snuck into the congressional Republican retreat in
Philadelphia Thursday, the same day President Donald Trump and Vice
President Mike Pence appeared, retreat organizers told lawmakers late
Saturday.
The revelation came as the nonprofit
Congressional Institute that organizes the retreat investigates how
audio of the gathering leaked. In an email to GOP lawmakers, institute
president Mark Strand did not directly say that the impersonator was the
same person who leaked the audio, but that was the implication.
"The Congressional Institute is continuing to
investigate this breach in order to fully understand how it happened and
to ensure it does not happen again," said Strand's email, which was
obtained by The Associated Press.
The audio was leaked to several news outlets and
first reported by The Washington Post. It reveals lawmakers airing
concerns about the practical difficulties and political risks of
repealing and replacing President Barack Obama's health care law, among
other things. There is also audio of a question-and-answer session with
Pence, indicating that the intruder was in the same room as the vice
president, which raises security concerns. It was not immediately clear
if she was also present for the session with Trump, who spoke before
Pence but did not engage in a private discussion with lawmakers.
The
email says that the unauthorized person "misrepresented herself on
multiple occasions to retreat organizers as the spouse of an elected
official" and used counterfeit credentials.
She went through the same
security checkpoints as every other attendee, including magnetometers,
and was escorted from the event around 6:30 p.m. Thursday, after Trump
and Pence left. The email says officials are working to "ascertain the
identity of the woman in question."
Capitol
Police and the Sergeant at Arms are investigating, according to a
statement Saturday night from Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., who
chairs the House GOP conference.
"Leaks from
internal member discussions are unacceptable," McMorris Rodgers said.
She said she welcomed an investigation "to get to the bottom of this
serious breach, as these conversations are intended to allow members to
candidly discuss how to address the issues facing the American people."
In
the audio, leaked anonymously to several news outlets, Republican
lawmakers could be heard airing their concerns about the health care
issue.
"We'd better be sure that we're prepared
to live with the market we've created," Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Calif.,
was quoted as saying in the Post and elsewhere. "That's going to be
called 'Trumpcare.' Republicans will own that lock, stock and barrel,
and we'll be judged in the election less than two years away."
Rep. Tom MacArthur, R-N.J., worried that Republican
plans could strip health insurance from many of the 20 million people
who gained coverage through the Affordable Care Act, including through
the expansion of Medicaid.
"We're telling those
people that we're not going to pull the rug out from under them, and if
we do this too fast, we are in fact going to pull the rug out from under
them," MacArthur was quoted as saying.
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