Baltimore Sun

Barr, vilified by all sides, did his job

- By John Kass John Kass is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune. His e-mail address is jskass@ chicagotri­bune.com, and his Twitter handle is @john_kass.

Attorney General William Barr, vilified witlessly and unreasonab­ly for years by the left — and most recently by conservati­ves — has just performed two critically important services to the republic.

After the election, Mr. Barr refused to put his name or the Department of Justice behind any of President Donald Trump’s wild claims — without evidence — that the presidenti­al election was stolen by Democrats and President-elect Joe Biden.

And before the election, Mr. Barr quietly appointed a special prosecutor to investigat­e what is known as the “Obamagate” scandal, the origins of now-discredite­d allegation­s that Mr. Trump’s campaign colluded with Russia to influence the outcome of the 2016 election.

Now that U.S. Attorney John Durham has been made special prosecutor, it will be politicall­y difficult for Mr. Biden to kill the investigat­ion. Mr. Durham is looking into decisions at the FBI and other intelligen­ce agencies under the Obama-Biden administra­tion to focus on Mr. Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al effort, to gather informatio­n on his campaign apparatus, and to delegitimi­ze the Trump administra­tion in its early days.

These witless, tribal times we live in didn’t begin with Mr. Trump. We’ve been living like this for more than a decade. And that old line about you’ve probably done your job when both sides hate you seems just about right.

Mr. Barr served as attorney general under the late President George H.W. Bush in the early 1990s. He made a great living in the private sector in the telecommun­ications industry. He didn’t need to return to government.

But in an interview in Chicago before the election, Mr. Barr told me that he felt he owed a debt to the Justice Department and his country.

He felt that Justice had been politicall­y weaponized against the opposition. And he worried about the long-term implicatio­ns of all this on the republic.

Angry rhetoric, bad tweets, hurt feelings and never-ending virtue signaling might not destroy the republic. But a weaponized Justice Department would destroy it.

If the FBI and CIA were seen by the people to be little more than political hit squads directed by political bosses, we wouldn’t have a republic.

“I had a very nice life,” Mr. Barr told me in that interview. “But I saw what was going on with the attempt to use the Justice Department as a political weapon and I felt the department was being buffeted, and I was concerned about it ... I kept pushing other people for these jobs ... I started thinking to myself, the only reason I was saying no was because of my personal comfort, and I felt that these are important times for the country.”

There has been no personal comfort for Mr. Barr. And his refusal to play the role of Mr. Trump’s “wingman” — as former Attorney General Eric Holder described his own role with former President Barack Obama — on allegation­s of election fraud infuriates the president.

“To date,” Mr. Barr told Associated Press, “we have not seen fraud on a scale that could have effected a different outcome in the election.”

Later Mr. Trump was asked by NBC News if he still had confidence in Mr. Barr.

“Ask me that in a number of weeks from now,” said Mr. Trump. And the Barr resignatio­n stories began.

It’s not that Mr. Barr wasn’t concerned about possible fraud with the massive mail-in vote that gave the victory to Mr. Biden. He was. Many grown-ups worried there would be problems with this new system. But the states decide how they run their elections, even states run by Republican state legislatur­es and Republican governors.

The problem is that when you’re a grown-up, you feel obliged to act like one. And Mr. Barr is a grown-up. He knows that speculatio­n — no matter how impassione­d — is not evidence in a court of law.

The president continues telling anyone who will listen that the election was stolen. I know many Republican­s who believe this. But belief isn’t enough for me. I need hard evidence. I haven’t seen it.

The U.S. Supreme Court hasn’t either, on Tuesday rejecting a Republican effort to overturn the presidenti­al election results in Pennsylvan­ia.

You don’t overturn an election on speculatio­n without evidence. That’s something done in banana republics.

Republican­s and their media allies wanted Mr. Barr to support Mr. Trump’s claims about a stolen election, and Mr.

Barr wouldn’t agree.

In Washington, they’ll never name a bridge after Mr. Barr. Or a fountain. They won’t commission a statue of a rumpled guy who loved a drink and a steak.

But William Barr did his job.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. Attorney General William Barr arrives at an Abraham Accords Signing Ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House on Sept. 15 in Washington, D.C.
ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. Attorney General William Barr arrives at an Abraham Accords Signing Ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House on Sept. 15 in Washington, D.C.

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