The Note: White House holds strong on wiretapping allegation despite pushback

Senate Intel Committee said they see 'no indications' Trump Tower was wiretapped

— -- Trump's first 100 days with ABC’s SHUSHANNAH WALSHE and VERONICA STRACQUALURSI

Day No. 57

TLDR: The White House is standing by Trump’s tweets accusing President Obama of wiretapping Trump Tower, even as others, like the Senate Intelligence Committee yesterday, are saying they see no evidence of it.

Notables

--Spicer continues to defend Trump's wiretapping claims: White House press secretary Sean Spicer gave a lengthy and exhaustive defense of President Donald Trump's wiretapping claims against then-President Obama to reporters Thursday, ABC’s MEGHAN KENEALLY and ALEXANDER MALLIN report. Spicer accused reporters of continuing "to perpetuate a false narrative" by not covering statements that could seem favorable to Trump and argued that the statements by the House and Senate Intelligence committees were not based on any investigative work. “The bipartisan leaders of the Intelligence Committee would not have made the statement they made without having been fully briefed by the appropriate authorities,” a spokeswoman for the Senate Intelligence Committee vice chair Mark Warner, D-Va. http://abcn.ws/2nKmhSD WATCH video of the exchange: http://abcn.ws/2m6X2h0

--Republican dismiss Trump's ambitious budget blueprint: President Trump's first White House budget received a chilly reception from many Republicans on Capitol Hill today, as appropriators and defense hawks questioned the blueprint's dramatic cuts to domestic spending and foreign aid. ABC’s MARY BRUCE, JOHN PARKINSON, BENJAMIN SIEGEL and ALI ROGIN have more. http://abcn.ws/2mAaTZq

--Happening today - Trump to meet Angela Merkel at White House: President Donald Trump will meet with German Chancellor Angela Merkel today at the White House — the first time the two leaders will meet. Although the U.S. and Germany are close allies, Trump and Merkel disagree on just about everything, from immigration and refugee policies to the future of NATO, ABC’s ELIZABETH MCLAUGHLIN notes. http://abcn.ws/2mBkQWA

This week on 'This Week': The Powerhouse Roundtable debates the week in politics, with Republican strategist and CNBC contributor Sara Fagen, New York Times White House correspondent and CNN political analyst Maggie Haberman, host and managing editor of TV One’s “News One Now” Roland Martin, and ABC News chief foreign correspondent Terry Moran.

Speed Read

Ex-Trump adviser Flynn paid $56,200 by Russian firms in 2015, documents show. President Trump's fired national security adviser, retired Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, was paid a total of $56,200 in 2015 by three Russian firms owned by or closely tied to the Kremlin, new documents released by congressional Democrats appear to show. The fees included $33,750 paid by Russia's state-owned TV network RT to the retired three-star general, who once served as director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, to speak at what the Russian organizers described to his speakers bureau as a "private, invitation-only conference." ABC’s MATTHEW MOSK and JAMES GORDON MEEK have more: http://abcn.ws/2mz5Pob

What's next for Trump's revised travel ban. President Trump's executive order banning travel from six majority-Muslim nations suffered a new round of blows as two federal judges issued different rulings stopping it from moving forward, at least temporarily. There are separate courses of action in the two cases, the first in Hawaii and the second in Maryland. There are still two outstanding motions for restraining orders in Washington state. ABC’s JAMES HILL and MEGHAN KENEALLY look at the next steps for Trump’s executive order: http://abcn.ws/2nJoDkD

Families face reality of possible budget cuts killing programs they use. The first budget proposal of President Donald Trump's administration was released Thursday morning and now people across the country are bracing for the prospect of having programs that impact their lives face elimination, ABC’s MEGHAN KENEALLY writes. One such person who is may be affected is Rigel Preston, a former coal miner who lives in Paintsville, Kentucky, who benefited from a job retraining program funded by the Appalachian Regional Commission. The budget released Thursday lists the Appalachian Regional Commission as one of 19 independent agencies whose funding would be eliminated. http://abcn.ws/2m7sT1j

McDonald's confirms Twitter account was 'hacked by an external source' after anti-Trump tweet posted. McDonald's confirmed Thursday night that one of its Twitter accounts was indeed hacked, after a tweet that called Donald Trump "a disgusting excuse of a president" was posted earlier in the day to its @McDonaldsCorp account. McDonald's spokeswoman Terri Hickey said Thursday night that the company has determined a hack was the culprit, ABC’s MORGAN WINSOR reports. http://abcn.ws/2nJeUuT

Who's tweeting?

@Steven_Swinford: EXCLUSIVE: US makes formal apology to Britain after White House accuses GCHQ of wiretapping Trump Tower http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/03/17/us-makes-formal-apology-britain-white-house-accuses-gchq-wiretapping/

@OfficialCBC: Yes, we are meeting w/ @realDonaldTrump on March 22 @ 3 PM. We will answer his campaign question to Black America: What do you have to lose?

@Elizabeth_McLau: OVERNIGHT -- Rex Tillerson: Military action against #NorthKorea is an option 'on the table' http://abcnews.go.com/International/rex-tillerson-military-action-north-korea-option-table/story?id=46196141

@_cingraham: Mick Mulvaney says Meals on Wheels "not showing any results." Actual peer-reviewed research says otherwise. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24916974 @NBCNews: Speaking on the @TODAYshow, Breitbart editor-in-chief Alex Marlow defends the publication: "We're not a hate site" http://nbcnews.to/2mPWppu