Gulf Today

WHAT OTHERS SAY

CONGRESS MUST MOVE TO PROTECT MUELLER’S INVESTIGAT­ION

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It’s well past time for Speaker of the House Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell to stand up and protect special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russian sabotage of the 2016 presidenti­al election. Mcconnell this week said that even if a bipartisan bill to protect Mueller emerges from the Senate Judiciary Committee, he will block a vote. “We’ll not be having this on the floor of the Senate,” he said. The proposed bill, authored by two Democrats and two Republican­s, provides for expedited judicial review in the event the special counsel is fired. It would allow the special counsel to challenge any terminatio­n that he believes was not executed for good cause. Mcconnell and Ryan, whose respective bodies have exercised almost no oversight of an executive branch that careens from one scandal to the next, publicly insist that there is no reason to shield Mueller’s investigat­ion into relations between President Donald Trump’s allies and foreign operatives. This is nonsense. After numerous indictment­s and guilty pleas already obtained by Mueller, and a related investigat­ion that led to a raid last week by federal agents on the office, home and hotel room of Trump’s personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, the president continues to attack the Mueller investigat­ion, calling it “fake and corrupt” and a “total witch hunt.” Trump long ago sought to derail Mueller, ordering White House counsel, Donald Mcgahn, to tell the Justice Department to shut down the investigat­ion. Mcgahn rightly refused. Trump’s eagerness to escape scrutiny does point to a problem with legislatio­n to protect Mueller: The president would likely veto any such measure. Nonetheles­s, as he rages against the rule of law, Congress should acknowledg­e its duty to uphold it.

Bloomberg News

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