Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Don’t get carried away

- David Brooks David Brooks is a columnist for the New York Times.

Iwas the op-ed editor at the Wall Street Journal at the peak of the Whitewater scandal. We ran a series of investigat­ive pieces “raising serious questions” (as we say in the scandal business) about the nefarious things the Clintons were thought to have done back in Arkansas.

Now I confess I couldn’t follow all the actual allegation­s made in those essays. They were six jungles deep in the weeds. But I do remember the intense atmosphere that the scandal created. A series of bombshell revelation­s came out in the media, which seemed monumental at the time. A special prosecutor was appointed and indictment­s were expected. Speculatio­n became the national sport.

In retrospect, Whitewater seems overblown. And yet it has to be confessed that, at least so far, the Whitewater scandal was far more substantiv­e than the Russia-collusion scandal now gripping Washington.

There may be a giant revelation still to come. But as the Trump-Russia story has evolved, it is striking how little evidence there is that any underlying crime occurred— that there was any actual collusion between the Donald Trump campaign and the Russians. Everything seems to be leaking out of this administra­tion, but so far the leaks about actual collusion are meager.

There were some meetings between Trump officials and some Russians, but so far no more than you’d expect from a campaign that was publicly and proudly pro-Putin. And so far nothing we know of these meetings proves or even indicates collusion.

I’m not saying there shouldn’t be an investigat­ion into potential Russia-Trump links. Russia’s attack on American democracy was truly heinous, and if the Trump people were involved, that would be treason. I’m saying first, let’s not get ahead of ourselves and assume that this link exists.

Second, there is something disturbing­ly meta about this whole affair. This is, as Yuval Levin put it, an investigat­ion about itself. Trump skeptics within the administra­tion laid a legal minefield all around the president, and then Trump—being Trump—stomped all over it, blowing himself up six ways from Sunday.

Of course Trump shouldn’t have tweeted about Oval Office tape recordings. Of course he shouldn’t have fired James Comey.

But even if you took a paragon of modern presidents—a contempora­ry Abraham Lincoln—and you directed a democratic­ally unsupervis­ed, infinitely financed team of prosecutor­s at him and gave them power to subpoena his staff and look under any related or unrelated rock in an attempt to bring him down, there’s a pretty good chance you could spur even this modern paragon to want to fight back. You could spur even him to do something that had the whiff of obstructio­n.

There’s just something worrisome every time we find ourselves replacing politics of democracy with the politics of scandal. In democracy, the issues count, and you try to win by persuasion. You recognize that your opponents are legitimate, that they will always be there, and that some form of compromise is inevitable.

In the politics of scandal, at least since Watergate, you don’t have to engage in persuasion or even talk about issues. Political victories are won when you destroy your political opponents by catching them in some wrongdoing. You get seduced by the delightful possibilit­y that your opponent will be eliminated. Politics is simply about moral superiorit­y and personal destructio­n.

The politics of scandal is delightful for cable news. It’s hard to build ratings arguing about health insurance legislatio­n. But it’s easy to build ratings if you are a glorified Court TV, if each whiff of scandal smoke generates hours of “Breaking News” intensity and a deluge of speculatio­n from good-looking former prosecutor­s.

Donald Trump rose peddling the politics of scandal—oblivious to policy, spreading insane allegation­s about birth certificat­es and other things—so maybe it’s just that he gets swallowed by it. But frankly, on my list of reasons Trump is unfit for the presidency, the Russia-collusion story ranks number 971, well below, for example, the perfectly legal ways he kowtows to thugs and undermines the norms of democratic behavior.

The people who hype the politics of scandal don’t make U.S. government purer. They deserve some of the blame for an administra­tion and government too distracted to do its job, for a political culture that is both shallower and nastier, and for fostering a process that looks like an elite game of entrapment.

Things are so bad that I’m going to have to give Trump the last word. On June 15 he tweeted, “They made up a phony collusion with the Russians story, found zero proof, so now they go for obstructio­n of justice on the phony story.” Unless there is some new revelation, that may turn out to be pretty accurate commentary.

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