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A member of the group described their efforts as “a concerted effort on the part of outside Trump supporters to put pressure on Rosenstein to comply with (House Select Committee on Intelligence Chairman Devin) Nunes’ information request. Outside supporters don’t believe Kelly or McGahn are being aggressive enough in defending the President. We’re trying to reinforce that this material must be turned over to Nunes as head of the committee.”

The members of this group working to persuade the President and Trump-friendly media include ousted former White House chief strategist Stephen Bannon, former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski, former deputy campaign manager David Bossie, President of the Trump Hispanic Advisory Council (and CNN commentator) Steve Cortes and many others. None of those reached for comment wanted to talk on the record. It was not clear how much Nunes is part of any of these conversations.

Another member of the group disputed that this push was being done in anything other than a “complementary” way to the work of Kelly and McGahn. “This is not necessarily adversarial,” he said.

The group over the weekend seemed to win a battle with White House insiders and succeeded in convincing the President to formally side with Nunes over his own Justice Department.

The Justice Department says that in early May, it received signoff from the White House before rejecting an information request from Nunes to find out more about an FBI confidential source who reportedly met with at least three Trump campaign aides during the campaign. On Saturday, the President tweeted the exact opposite: “If the FBI or DOJ was infiltrating a campaign for the benefit of another campaign, that is a really big deal. Only the release or review of documents that the House Intelligence Committee (also, Senate Judiciary) is asking for can give the conclusive answers. Drain the Swamp!”

Trump demands Justice Department examine whether it or FBI spied on campaign

Members describe the group trying to influence Trump as ad hoc and informal, with no structure but a common purpose. They consider House Freedom Caucus Chairman Rep. Mark Meadows, a North Carolina Republican, and Rep. Jim Jordan, an Ohio Republican, to be allies in this cause. Meadows, Jordan and Nunes have talked about their purpose as congressional oversight.

The demand for further material about the FBI source has put the President squarely at odds with his own FBI director Christopher Wray, who told the Senate last week that “the day that we can’t protect human sources is the day the American people start becoming less safe. Human sources in particular who put themselves at great risk to work with us and with our foreign partners have to be able to trust that we’re going to protect their identities and in many cases their lives and the lives of their families.”

Sunday morning, the group was trying to convince Trump to write a letter demanding that Rosenstein turn over material about the confidential source to Nunes. By Sunday afternoon, the President had tweeted what seemed to members of this outside group to be such an order.

“I hereby demand, and will do so officially tomorrow, that the Department of Justice look into whether or not the FBI/DOJ infiltrated or surveilled the Trump Campaign for Political Purposes – and if any such demands or requests were made by people within the Obama Administration!” the President wrote.

A member of the outsider group tells CNN that he felt the President was formally ordering the Justice Department to turn over the documents to Nunes, but that since Rosenstein attempted to blur that issue with others by assigning it all to the inspector general of the Justice Department to sort out, they would keep pushing for the President to issue a more direct order.
But some allies of the President believe that his push might actually hurt the cause of releasing this information. GOP congressional sources told CNN’s Sarah Westwood that Trump’s latest intervention might instead make the Justice Department less inclined to hand over the documents requested by Republicans on the House Intelligence Committee. If the FBI’s use of a confidential source becomes the subject of an active investigation, the sources said, Justice Department officials might have even more reason to withhold records from lawmakers than they do already. That’s why Trump’s allies on Capitol Hill had pressed the President to assist them with their quest for documents — not to help them get a separate investigation opened. Now, some members and staffers fear Trump’s attempts to help may backfire.

CNN’s Sarah Westwood contributed to this report.

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