The decision to release the transcript of President Trump's Ukraine call certainly wasn't unanimous among administration officials.

White House aides, The Washington Post reports, were "divided" about whether Trump should put out the rough transcript of his July call to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, which sparked a whistleblower complaint.

Democrats had called upon Trump to release the transcript, but when it came out Wednesday and showed the president pushed for Zelensky to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden's son and involve Attorney General William Barr, some Democrats were shocked the White House actually put it out.

But according to the Post, at least two Cabinet officials thought releasing it was a terrible idea: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin "vociferously argued against it." Both, as the Post notes, had expressed reluctance about releasing private conversations with foreign leaders in Sunday show appearances. Some of Trump's senior advisers also reportedly warned him that sharing the conversation "might not be exculpatory" like he seemed to think.

On the other hand, despite being mentioned on the call, Barr was reportedly among those recommending Trump release the notes, an argument also made some of Trump's lawyers. In the end, Trump sided with Barr, probably in part because privately, the Post writes, he "did not believe his conversation with the Ukrainian president was problematic." Needless to say, when the memorandum dropped Wednesday and Democrats began to read it over, he was in for a surprise. Brendan Morrow