WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump said he'll make some staff changes following the midterm elections where Republicans lost the House but expanded their majority in the Senate.

The president offered no specifics at a post-election news conference Wednesday and declined to discuss the fate of Attorney General Jeff Sessions or other members of his Cabinet. He said he does not intend to end the special counsel's probe into Russian meddling in the 2016 campaign.

"I’d rather answer that at a little bit different time," Trump said during a White House press conference when asked specifically about Sessions, who the president has repeatedly criticized in public. "I’m very happy with most of my Cabinet. We’re looking at different people for different positions."

Trump has declined to say for weeks whether he would fire Sessions or Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein following the election. Asked about special counsel Robert Mueller's probe of Russian interference, Trump called it a "disgrace" and said that he "could fire everybody," but said he would not.

"I could end it right now," Trump said. "Politically, I don't like stopping it."