David Jackson

USA TODAY

WASHINGTON — Seeking to get past stories about Attorney General Jeff Sessions and the Russians, President Trump spent Friday visiting a school in Florida and mocking Democrats for what he called their hypocrisy.

Tweeting out an old picture of Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer sharing coffee and donuts with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Trump said: "We should start an immediate investigation into @SenSchumer and his ties to Russia and Putin. A total hypocrite!"

The president later tweeted out a picture of House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi with Russian officials, and said he would "demand a second investigation, after Schumer, of Pelosi for her close ties to Russia, and lying about it."

The tweets came hours after Trump issued a statement expressing support for Sessions and claiming that "the real story is all of the illegal leaks of classified and other information. It is a total witch hunt!"

Schumer responded on Twitter, saying he would "happily talk" about his past contacts with Russians in public and under oath, and asking Trump: "Would you & your team?" (Schumer also disclosed the he and Putin had Krispy Kreme donuts when the Russian president visited New York City back in 2003.)

In her reply tweet, Pelosi referred to Sessions' contact with a Russian ambassador and said that Trump "doesn't know difference between official mtg photographed by press & closed secret mtg his AG lied about under oath." Also calling for an outside investigation, Pelosi told a Politico Playbook event that "there's a whole Russian connection of personal, political and financial" ties involving "President Trump, his administration and his campaign."

Politics aside, there is no evidence the Russia flap is going away soon amid various investigations into Russian efforts to interfere with last year's presidential election, including hack attacks on Democratic officials close to Trump opponent Hillary Clinton.

A day after Sessions said he would recuse himself from any investigation involving the Trump campaign — an announcement that came hours after revelations of previously undisclosed talks between Sessions and Russia's ambassador to the United States — Schumer and other Democrats continued to call for a special prosecutor to investigate the Trump-Russia relationship.

Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, told MSNBC's Morning Joe it appears that Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak's approach to Sessions "had to do with wanting to curry favor or learn information from someone who had potentially the next president's ear."

Like Schumer, Schiff called on Sessions to resign and said his recusal is not enough.

In calling for an outside investigation, Schiff said on MSNBC that "these are the kinds of extraordinary circumstances where the public is not going to have confidence in someone that is not fully independent here."

Trump and aides said there is nothing to the Russia story, no evidence of collusion or contacts between campaign officials and Russian officials who may have been involved in the 2016 election.

"The big point here is the president himself knows what his involvement was, and that’s zero," said White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders. "He had no interaction, and I think that’s what the story should be focused on.”

Democratic lawmakers who called on Sessions to resign noted that, during his confirmation hearings to be attorney general, Sessions said he had no contact with Russian officials.

Sessions and his defenders at the White House said his testimony dealt with his work as a campaign surrogate for Trump, and that two talks with Kislyak came in connection with his official duties as a U.S. senator.

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In his statement, Trump called Sessions "an honest man" who did "not say anything wrong," though "he could have stated his response more accurately, but it was clearly not intentional."

The president also said "this whole narrative is a way of saving face for Democrats losing an election that everyone thought they were supposed to win. The Democrats are overplaying their hand. They lost the election and now, they have lost their grip on reality."

Trump called it a "witch hunt" — the same phrase used by Russian officials.

“All this is very much reminiscent of a witch hunt and the McCarthyism era which we all thought was long gone," said Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

Amid the flap, Trump traveled to Orlando on Friday to promote his "school choice" policies during a visit to Saint Andrew Catholic School in Orlando.

The Orlando stop came en route to the Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Fla., where Trump plans to spend the weekend.

In his joint address to Congress, Trump called education "the civil rights issue of our time," and endorsed a proposal to finance "school choice" programs for parents of children in poor neighborhoods, though he did not provide details.

Repeating the statement about civil rights during his visit to Saint Andrew, Trump said the school is doing a “fantastic job” because it “enriches both the mind and the soul. That's a good education."

Public education advocates said Trump's plans would short-change public schools.

"He has taken a page right out of the extremist playbook by criticizing, undermining and proposing the defunding of public schools and instead trumpeting private alternatives," said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers.