Irish Independent

Trump has put US democracy on the line with a loyalist at heart of justice

- Max Boot PHOTO: AP/ CHARLIE NEIBERGALL

ON TUESDAY, voters handed the House to Democrats. On Wednesday, President Donald Trump showed why this kind of check on his untrammell­ed authority is so imperative – if probably inadequate.

Nearly the first thing the president did after getting the election news – shortly after threatenin­g Democrats and berating the media in a Wednesday morning news conference – was to fire attorney general Jeff Sessions. Trump then appointed as acting Attorney General, not the natural candidate – Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, an apolitical career prosecutor – but, rather, Sessions’s chief of staff, Matthew Whitaker. Why pick Whitaker?

A former US attorney for the Southern District of Iowa and a hulking former football player from the University of Iowa, Whitaker is a Trumpian true believer.

During a 2014 interview he said, “I have a Christian worldview”, and proceeded to attack abortion rights, same-sex marriage, Obamacare, gun control, “amnesty” for undocument­ed immigrants, efforts to mitigate climate change, all tax increases, foreign aid to “countries that don’t like us”, the Education Department and even Marbury v Madison, the seminal 1803 Supreme Court decision that establishe­d judicial review of political decisions.

Whitaker shares his hard-right politics with Sessions. Will he also emulate Sessions’s willingnes­s to allow the investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election to proceed on its course? Only in the unlikely event that he is willing to eat his words.

As a private legal commentato­r, Whitaker agreed with Trump when the president concocted an entirely imaginary red line against investigat­ing his suspicious finances. “The president is absolutely correct,” Whitaker wrote in August 2017, claiming that special counsel Robert Mueller “has come up to a red line in the Russia 2016 election-meddling investigat­ion that he is dangerousl­y close to crossing”. Whitaker also retweeted an article by a lawyer who wrote that Trump’s legal team should not “co-operate with Mueller’s lynch mob”, justified the decision by the Trump campaign to meet with a suspected Russian agent, and criticised the idea that the president could be charged with obstructin­g justice.

Appearing on CNN in July 2017, shortly before he went to work at the Justice Department, Whitaker argued that Trump should sabotage Mueller’s investigat­ion by having the deputy attorney general cut his budget rather than by simply firing him. Whitaker will now be in a position to carry out his own strategy, unless he recuses himself, because it appears that he has taken over from Rosenstein supervisio­n of the Mueller investigat­ion.

That risks a constituti­onal crisis – one that Republican­s have practicall­y invited by refusing to risk Trump’s ire by standing up for Mueller. The Senate Judiciary Committee actually passed bipartisan legislatio­n that would protect Mueller by giving him the ability to appeal his firing to a panel of judges. An earlier version included a mandate that the Justice Department informs Congress of any change in Mueller’s mandate. But Majority Leader Mitch McConnell would not bring the bill to the Senate floor. Comparable legislatio­n in the House did not even advance out of committee.

Even Republican­s who were critical of Trump refused to use their power to force a vote by stalling other legislativ­e priorities. That is why I shed no tears over the defeat of some moderate House Republican­s in the midterm election: they did nothing to create an effective check on Trump.

Of course, even if legislatio­n to protect Mueller had passed, it would not necessaril­y have protected him from the kind of sneak attack Whitaker can now carry out by reducing the special counsel’s budget and whittling away at his mandate.

Mueller can take some steps to protect himself by co-operating with friendly state prosecutor­s and local federal prosecutor­s.

House Democrats can, in turn, mount their own investigat­ions and subpoena the special counsel’s report, once it is written, to prevent its suppressio­n. But truly effective action to safeguard the embattled rule of law would require bipartisan and bicameral co-operation.

If leading Republican­s cared about their oath of office they would join with leading Democrats to pass legislatio­n protecting Mueller’s independen­ce and threaten Whitaker – and Trump – with impeachmen­t should they attempt to impede the investigat­ion. If he brazenly moves to obstruct justice, Trump could hasten his own demise – but only if there are enough Republican­s in Congress with the same sense of responsibi­lity displayed by Senator Barry Goldwater, House minority leader John Rhodes and Senate minority leader Hugh Scott when they told President Richard Nixon on August 7, 1974, that they could no longer support his lies and cover-ups. Nixon resigned the next day.

It is impossible to imagine such a scene transpirin­g today. Modern Republican­s have placed their faith in Trump over the constituti­on. That faith was rewarded for senators, if not House members, with midterm-election gains. Worries that, after the election, Trump would be emboldened to sabotage the Justice Department have sadly been borne out.

Now, the question is whether anyone in the Senate majority has the courage to fight for democracy. I fear the answer to that question. (© Washington Post)

Worries that Trump would be emboldened to sabotage the Justice Department have now sadly been borne out

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 ??  ?? Matthew Whitaker has been named as acting attorney general.
Matthew Whitaker has been named as acting attorney general.
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