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Under fire, Conway maintains support of the president

Under fire, Conway maintains support of the president

WASHINGTON — Kellyanne Conway, the high-profile White House counsellor, has come under fire from Democratic and Republican lawmakers, fact checkers and the media. But she's so far maintained the support of her boss, President Donald Trump.

Trump backed Conway both publicly and privately Thursday after House Oversight Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, criticized her for promoting Ivanka Trump's fashion line during a television appearance and urged the Office of Government Ethics to review the matter. White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Conway had been "counselled" on her comments, but he would not expand on what that entailed.

The president appeared to take issue with his own press secretary's depiction, telling staff that he believed it was unfair to Conway and made it sound like she was in trouble, according to a person with direct knowledge of his comments. A White House spokeswoman said that while Trump didn't see Conway's television comments urging people to buy Ivanka Trump's products, he believed she was "merely sticking up" for his daughter after Nordstrom dropped her brand.

The flare-up came in the midst of a rough stretch for Conway, who is among Trump's most visible advisers.

Her reference to a nonexistent "Bowling Green massacre" made her a punchline for comics and internet pranksters. She said it was a slip of the tongue as she was describing the 2011 arrest of two Iraqi nationals in a failed plot to send weapons overseas to al-Qaida. It was later discovered that she had made that misstatement before.

Conway was then caught up in the bad blood between the Trump administration and CNN. The news network was angered last weekend when Vice-President Mike Pence made the rounds of Sunday talk shows and pointedly left out Jake Tapper's CNN show. CNN said it "passed" when Conway was offered instead, while Conway said she was unable to appear.

Conway's high-profile and close relationship with Trump has created tension with some other advisers. One Trump associate said Conway's standing with some senior staff had been hurt by her recent missteps, though the person noted that her relationship with the president remained strong.

The Trump associate and the person with knowledge of the president's comments about Conway insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss internal matters.

Conway's sales pitch for Ivanka Trump was particularly notable in that it sparked a rebuke from Chaffetz, a Republican who until now has not questioned the young administration on ethical matters. Chaffetz said Conway's actions were "wrong, wrong, wrong, clearly over the line, unacceptable."

The Utah congressman and the ranking Democrat on the committee, Elijah Cummings of Maryland, jointly asked for the ethics review. The Office of Government Ethics advises federal employees on such issues but is not an enforcement agency.

While Trump and Vice-President Mike Pence are not subject to ethical regulations and laws for federal employees, Conway is. Among the rules: An employee shall not use his or her office "for the endorsement of any product, service or enterprise."

But because Conway reports only to Trump, it would be up to him to punish her for any ethics infraction and that seems unlikely.

"For whatever reason, the White House staff evidently believes that they are protected from the law the same way the president and vice-president are," said Stuart Gilman, a former special assistant to the director of OGE.

In addition to the House Oversight Committee, two liberal-funded government watchdog groups pounced on Conway's comments, filing ethics violation complaints with OGE. A third group, the Project on Government Oversight, asked Attorney General Jeff Sessions to open a Justice Department investigation.

Nordstrom reiterated that its decision to drop Ivanka Trump's brand was based on its performance, not politics. The company said sales of her items had steadily declined over the past year, particularly in the last half of 2016, "to the point where it didn't make good business sense for us to continue with the line for now."

While Ivanka Trump has handed over management of her company while she is in Washington, like her father, she retains ownership of it.

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Associated Press writers Bernard Condon, David Bauder and Anne D'Innocenzio in New York contributed to this report.

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Follow Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC and Julie Bykowicz at http://twitter.com/bykowicz

Julie Pace And Julie Bykowicz, The Associated Press