Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Drip, drip, drip

- ALBERT R. HUNT Albert R. Hunt is a Bloomberg View columnist.

President Donald Trump’s apologists in Congress are learning that defending him is like playing whack-a-mole; every time they think they’ve knocked down some embarrassi­ng revelation related to the Justice Department probe of Russian election meddling, something new seems to pop up.

Republican allies of the president are straining to paint the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion and special counsel Robert Mueller, who is leading the probe, as anti-Trump partisans. It’s feeble stuff.

The latest allegation involves five months of missing text messages between two FBI agents on the Mueller team who were involved in an investigat­ion of Hillary Clinton. Trump and his supporters have dropped dark hints that the missing messages indicated the likelihood of a conspiracy against the president. The more plausible explanatio­n came from the FBI: A technical glitch resulted in improper storage. The DOJ has since recovered the missing messages.

As Republican­s struggled to keep that weak conspiracy theory afloat, a bigger story emerged: The fiancee of a former Trump foreign policy adviser who is now cooperatin­g with Mueller predicted that the adviser would emerge as a key figure in the inquiry. She compared him to John Dean, the White House counsel in President Richard Nixon’s White House who pleaded guilty to aiding the Watergate cover-up and then became a key witness against other officials.

New scandals keep surfacing. Last week McClatchy reported that the FBI is investigat­ing whether a Kremlin-connected Russian lawyer funneled money through the National Rifle Associatio­n to help the 2016 Trump campaign (it’s illegal to use foreign money to finance federal elections). Then came news from the Wall Street Journal that Trump’s lawyer commission­ed a secret payoff to a porn star to keep her quiet about a 2006 sexual liaison with Trump.

For most of a year, Trump and congressio­nal defenders have also tried to undermine the credibilit­y of Christophe­r Steele, the former British spy and Russia expert who authored an explosive dossier on Trump’s ties with Russia. Republican­s charged that the report was full of errors, was paid for by Clinton and was a political hit job that led to Mueller’s investigat­ion. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles Grassley and South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham called on the Justice Department to investigat­e Steele, a British citizen.

So far they’ve done nothing to dent the credibilit­y of Steele, whose expertise has been praised by top U.S. intelligen­ce officials. Steele has acknowledg­ed that his leaked dossier was like a raw intelligen­ce report that included unverified informatio­n. The Clinton campaign did secretly pay for much of the work without Steele’s knowledge, but it was initiated by a conservati­ve news website funded by a big Republican donor.

Other Trump backers on Capitol Hill, notably Representa­tive Jim Jordan, a Freedom Caucus leader, have tried to impugn the FBI as politicall­y motivated in the Trump probe. Representa­tive Francis Rooney of Florida went so far as to call for a “purge” of the bureau.

The evidence so far is that the public is unconvince­d. In last week’s NBC News/Wall Street Journal national poll, respondent­s gave the bureau positive marks by a margin of almost three to one.

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