FBI PUBLIC AFFAIRS - DIRECTOR'S AM NEWS BRIEFING TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2019 5:00 AM EDT Trump Says He Did Not Pressure Ukraine Over Bidens, Has Yet To Decide About Releasing Transcript. Coverage of the continuing controversy over a whistleblower complaint regarding President Trump's communications with a foreign leader focuses on whether or not the President admitted to pressuring Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and his son, and on whether Trump will release the transcript of the telephone call in question. The possibility of Presidential pressure on a foreign power over a possible 2020 rival is leading some Democrats who had wavered on opening an impeachment investigation into Trump to now call for proceedings to begin. Margaret Brennan opened the CBS Evening News (9/23, lead story, 2:19, 4.27M) with the story, reporting, "More answers lead to even more questions about President Trump's July phone call with the new leader of Ukraine. The President confirmed they did discuss Joe Biden and his son. [Trump] also publicly accused the Bidens of being corrupt but he denied putting any pressure on Ukraine to open an investigation! CBS' Weijia Jiang: The phone conversation between President Trump and [Zelensky] is the talk of the town as President Trump meets with world leaders in New York City. The President has been on the defensive since it was revealed that a whistieblower filed a complaint about his communications with Ukraine. The question: Did Mr. Trump in that July 25 call threaten to withhold military funding if the Ukrainians did not investigate Joe Biden and his son?" Trump: "I didn't. No, I didn't." Jiang: Today, he confirmed they discussed foreign aid, but no quid pro quo." Trump: "I put no pressure on them whatsoever. I could have. I think it would probably possibly have been okay if I did. But I didn't." David Muir said on ABC World News Tonight (9/23, story 2, 3:19, 7.06M) that Trump