No, the claim is misleading and not fully accurate.
nytimes.com
The "over 100 times" part
- The figure of over 100 contacts (often cited as ~140) between Trump associates/campaign figures and Russian nationals, WikiLeaks, or intermediaries comes from a 2019 New York Times analysis, not a Senate report.
nytimes.com
- This tally includes emails, calls, texts, meetings, and social media messages compiled from public reporting, court records, and the Mueller report. It spans the campaign and transition period (roughly mid-2015 to early 2017). Some were innocuous (e.g., diplomatic outreach), while others raised concerns (e.g., Paul Manafort sharing polling data with Konstantin Kilimnik, who had Russian intelligence ties).
thehill.com
The Senate Intelligence Committee's bipartisan (Republican-led) Volume 5 report (2020) detailed extensive contacts and counterintelligence risks—especially around figures like Manafort, Carter Page, George Papadopoulos, and others—but it did not state or emphasize a specific "over 100 meetings" figure. It focused on how Russia exploited vulnerabilities in the campaign.
intelligence.senate.gov
"Republican Senate report found... Russian collusion"
- The Senate Intelligence Committee investigation was bipartisan (chaired by Republican Richard Burr, with Democrat Mark Warner as vice chair). It affirmed Russian interference aimed at helping Trump but found no evidence of conspiracy or collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russian government.
intelligence.senate.gov
- Key points from the report and related probes:
- Russia conducted an extensive influence campaign (hacking, disinformation, social media).
- There were problematic contacts and poor judgment by some Trump associates (e.g., eagerness for dirt on Clinton, failure to report some outreach).
- No coordination or collusion: The committee, Mueller investigation, and others explicitly did not establish a criminal conspiracy. Mueller stated the evidence "did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government."
npr.org
- The report highlighted "grave" counterintelligence concerns (e.g., Manafort's ties) but stopped short of collusion claims.
npr.org
Bottom line: There were many contacts (some suspicious), which is what you'd expect in a high-profile campaign with foreign interest. The Senate report documented them thoroughly but rejected the "collusion" narrative as a coordinated conspiracy. The meme-style claim mixes a real NYT tally with a partisan spin that the actual Senate findings do not support.