Baltimore Sun

Mueller now both parties’ talking point

Special counsel’s probe expected to be campaign fodder

- By Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON — “It’s over,” President Donald Trump declared after former special counsel Robert Mueller ended hours of testimony about his twoyear investigat­ion into Russian election interferen­ce. But many don’t expect Trump or the Democrats looking to replace him in 2020 to just move on.

Mueller’s marathon Capitol Hill appearance on Wednesday offered few new insights but no shortage of political fodder for both Democrats and Republican­s in Washington, where many would rather keep the argument going than mark its end. Both parties are expected to keep waving the special counsel’s findings, and talking about the possibilit­y of impeachmen­t, to motivate core supporters in the coming presidenti­al campaign.

That may be especially true for Trump, whose political strategy relies on conflict, with the Russia investigat­ion remaining a potent adversary.

While the Mueller probe loomed as a pressing political problem for Trump, he also saw that it could be turned into an asset. From the start, he’s peppered his campaign rallies with complaints about the swirling investigat­ion getting in the way of his agenda. And Trump has no plans to let go of the now-concluded Mueller inquiry as his focus turns toward reelection, standing ready to include it in the litany of perceived slights and political buzzwords that punctuate his rallies and tweets.

“It’s always going to be high on the set list,” former White House press secretary Sean Spicer said of the Mueller probe.

Trump himself brought up Mueller unprompted to a roomful of donors in West Virginia on Wednesday night, hours after Mueller concluded his testimony. Trump asserted that Mueller’s testimony was a miserable effort by Democrats to discredit him, West Virginia Senate President Mitch Carmichael told the AP. The president also called the hearings a dud for anyone who thought new, more damaging informat i on would emerge, Carmichael said.

On Twitter on Thursday morning, Trump quoted triumphant­ly from the words of “Fox & Friends” hosts who bashed Mueller and expressed support for his administra­tion.

It will be that way for Democratic presidenti­al candidates, too, as they seek to win over highly motivated primary voters who believe Mueller’s report was a road map for impeachmen­t. Never mind that the party’s leadership in Washington would rather pivot toward pocketbook issues.

Operatives in both parties see Mueller as a potent — and lasting — rallying cry for their respective political cores, in a political environmen­t where turning out reliable supporters is viewed as more efficient than winning over skeptics in the political center.

“Both sides are going to use it, “said Republican consultant David Kochel. Trump, in particular, has excelled at revving up base supporters with harsh rhetoric about straw men, from federal judges to foreign leaders, he noted. “It’s all about that base.”

That dynamic was on display for Democrats this week in Detroit, where the NAACP held its annual conference and approved a resolution calling on the House to begin impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

While Mueller was testifying in Washington, several 2020 contenders spoke to the organizati­on and reiterated their calls for impeachmen­t.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, one of the most vocal candidates pressing for impeachmen­t proceeding­s, acknowledg­ed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s reservatio­ns.

“I understand that there are people who for political reasons say it’s not where we want to be,” the Massachuse­tts senator said. “But in my view, some things are above politics. And one of them is our constituti­onal responsibi­lities to do what is right, and the responsibi­lity of the Congress of the United States of America when a president breaks the law is to bring impeachmen­t charges against that president.”

Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, struck a more centrist tone, saying the best resolution to the nation’s politics is to defeat Trump in next year’s election. While he touted the importance of impeachmen­t proceeding­s, he stopped short of pushing Democrats to start them.

“There’s more than enough in that report to interpret it as an impeachmen­t referral,” he told reporters. “I believe that an i mpeachment i nquiry would bring more facts to light. I also believe that the Republican Senate will not act.”

Former Vice President Joe Biden is the most prominent Democratic White House hopeful who hasn’t taken a firm stand on the issue of impeachmen­t, a position that could be increasing­ly untenable as the primary unfolds.

Even as White House officials proclaim they want to move on, they are keeping up their criticism of Mueller’s team and pushing to “investigat­e the investigat­ors,” seeing longterm gain in prolonging the saga.

“It really is time to move on,” White House counselor Kellyanne Conway told reporters Thursday, moments before demanding an i nvestigati­on of Mueller’s team. “We need to know who was in charge of the Mueller investigat­ion,” she said.

Congressio­nal Democrats on Thursday publicly pivoted away from questions of impeachmen­t by saying they are going to “own” the upcoming August recess on issues such as health care and prescripti­on drug costs.

 ?? NICHOLAS KAMM/GETTY-AFP ?? President Donald Trump is expected to use the investigat­ion to motivate his supporters.
NICHOLAS KAMM/GETTY-AFP President Donald Trump is expected to use the investigat­ion to motivate his supporters.

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