Trump didn't obtain CNN wrestling video from Reddit, White House says

"The video was not pulled from Reddit," a White House official told ABC News.

— -- The video of Donald Trump wrestling a man with a CNN logo superimposed on his head — tweeted out by Trump over the weekend — did not come from the website Reddit, the White House said on Monday.

“The video was not pulled from Reddit,” a White House official told ABC News. The official decline to respond to questions about where the president obtained the clip.

The Reddit user posted on the discussion website that the video is recognizable from the way the “GIF matches the movements” and the “original logo” but that someone else “added sound to it.” The user said on the site that he posted the video on a popular subreddit dubbed The_Donald, where Trump supporters converge, on June 28.

Brian Stelter, the host of CNN’s “Reliable Sources,” tweeted CNN’s response to Trump’s tweet on Sunday, saying in part, “We will keep doing our jobs. He should start doing his.” The response criticized Trump for involving himself in “juvenile behavior beneath the dignity of his office” rather than focusing on his “overseas trips, North Korea and the health care bill.”

“The president in no way, form or fashion has ever promoted or encouraged violence. If anything, quite the contrary,” the team tweeted, adding that the quote was from Sanders on June 29.

Members of Congress were quick to slam Trump for his tweet on Sunday and stress the importance of press freedom.

Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb., appeared on CNN on Sunday, warning that there is an important “distinction between bad stories and crappy coverage and trying to weaponize distrust.”

There's an impt distinction between bad stories and crappy coverage & trying to weaponize distrust. - @BenSasse to @jaketapper @CNN

— Alice Stewart (@alicetweet) July 2, 2017

Meanwhile, some Republican members of Congress and White House officials focused on attacking the press.

Trump has for years had a hostile relationship with CNN, often calling the network “fake news” with “phony stories” and “garbage journalism.”

He tweeted on July 1 that he was thinking of changing “Fake News CNN” to “Fraud News CNN.”

ABC News’ Alexander Mallin and Arlette Saenz contributed to this report.

There's an impt distinction between bad stories and crappy coverage & trying to weaponize distrust. - @BenSasse to @jaketapper @CNN

Meanwhile, some Republican members of Congress and White House officials focused on attacking the press.

Trump has for years had a hostile relationship with CNN, often calling the network “fake news” with “phony stories” and “garbage journalism.”

He tweeted on July 1 that he was thinking of changing “Fake News CNN” to “Fraud News CNN.”

ABC News’ Alexander Mallin and Arlette Saenz contributed to this report.