Baltimore Sun

Congress must act

It’s time for lawmakers of both parties to stand up to President Trump and forcefully repudiate his shameful capitulati­on to Russia’s Vladimir Putin

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Our view:

On Tuesday, one day after President Donald Trump’s disgracefu­l deference to Russian President Vladimir Putin — a press conference capitulati­on by a U.S. president to a strongman dictator unmatched in modern history (and perhaps ever) — even the usual Trump apologists on Fox News and similar friendly venues were having trouble processing what happened in Helsinki. The president’s refusal to stand up to Mr. Putin, his siding with an adversary over his own intelligen­ce agencies, his failure to challenge Russian actions in Crimea or in the murder of political opponents and journalist­s, and above all else, his willingnes­s to accept Mr. Putin’s denials of his country’s deliberate and extensive efforts to affect the outcome of the last U.S. election, were simply too nauseating to ignore.

Oh, there were some lame attempts. The most obvious was President Trump’s ownefforts to walk back his Mondaycomm­ents on Tuesday, telling reporters he accepts the U.S. intelligen­ce community’s findings that Russia’s “meddling in the 2016 took place” adding that it “could be other people also.” He also denied collusion, again, although his actions in Helsinki seemed tantamount to openly colluding with Mr. Putin. Certainly, Mr. Trump had every opportunit­y there to talk about the dozen Russian nationals indicted last week by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III, but he did not. Instead, Mr. Trump spoke of how Mr. Putin’s denial of Russian involvemen­t in the election was “extremely strong and powerful.” President Trump offered no new pronouncem­ents on that front Tuesday.

The fact is no amount of excuses, whether from pundits or actual White House advisers not to mention half-hearted presidenti­al clarificat­ions, is going to prove adequate to take away the strong case of the jaw-drops from Americans who watched their commander in chief do his best impression of the Manchurian Candidate. Between Mr. Trump’s refusal to publicly challenge Mr. Putin’s election manipulati­ons — behavior universall­y acknowledg­ed by every major figure in the U.S. intelligen­ce community — and his equally appalling recent attacks on our NATO allies (countries he has characteri­zed as “foes,” a tag he has steadfastl­y refused to apply to Russia), howcould anyone be certain of President’s Trump’s true allegiance? The president might as well have invited Mr. Putin’s GRU to manipulate the midterms as well.

Such bizarre and un-American behavior requires more than a clarificat­ion; it demands a repudiatio­n more than a tut-tut from the usual suspects in Republican circles, most of whom — with the glaring exception of ailing Sen. John McCain and a few others — appear to have put their courage in a blind trust. Mr. Trump’s historic denial of this nation’s basic principles, its fealty to the rule of law, its insistence on free and fair elections, demands more than Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s bland insistence that the “Russians are not our friends” or the “not helpful” criticism of the president’s refusal to acknowledg­e Russian meddling in the U.S. President Donald Trump poses with a soccer ball given to him by Russian President Vladimir Putin in Helsinki, Finland. 2016 election by Sen. Susan Collins.

Senator McCain put it best in a statement in which he called it "one of the most disgracefu­l performanc­es by an American president in memory." Kudos also to Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska who chaffed at the president’s claim that both countries were equally responsibl­e for the deteriorat­ion in their relationsh­ip. "WhenthePre­sident plays these moral equivalenc­e games, he gives Putin a propaganda win he desperatel­y needs,” the Republican senator said Monday. They are singing the right tune, but their chorus is too small.

What’s needed right now — as soon as possible — is for the full Congress to rebuke President Trump’s behavior at the Helsinki summit and reiterate this nation’s position that if Mr. Putin wants a better relationsh­ip with the United States and its allies, it needs to stop acting like an outlaw and a bully. It’s not this country’s fault that Russia faces substantia­l economic sanctions, it’s the product of Mr. Putin’s malign activities around the world, including his efforts to subvert Western democracie­s. We seek peace. We seek better relations. It begins not with the United States, however. but with the country that invaded Ukraine, devastated Syria and hacks foreign elections.

Perhaps a formal censure from Congress is too much to expect. It’s only happened once in this nation’s history — to Andrew Jackson in1834. But a simple resolution making clear that President Trump is a man alone in his acceptance of Mr. Putin’s assurances (particular­ly given this president’s affection for the dictator and his indifferen­ce toward the truth) would go a long way toward calming the fears of U.S. allies and putting Mr. Putin on notice that interferin­g with a U.S. election is not some minor trifling. Voters will eventually have their say on how they feel about the Trump-Putin fiasco in 2020, but that’s a long time away. It’s nowup to the GOP majority in Congress to show the United States still stands for something other than the ego, naivete and ignorance of the current White House occupant.

 ?? CHRIS MCGRATH/AFP GETTY ??
CHRIS MCGRATH/AFP GETTY

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