Call & Times

Democrats have already forgotten Mueller

- By MARC THIESSEN

President Trump’s critics are now complainin­g that he asked the Australian prime minister to cooperate with the Justice Department’s investigat­ion into the origins of the Mueller probe and that Attorney General William Barr has traveled overseas to ask foreign intelligen­ce officials to coopASerat­e with that investigat­ion. The New York Times called it another example of “the president using high-level diplomacy to advance his personal political interests.”

No, it’s not. The president’s critics are conflating two different things: the investigat­ion by Trump’s private lawyer, Rudolph Giuliani, into Hunter Biden’s business dealings, and the official inquiry by U.S. Attorney John Durham into the counterint­elligence investigat­ion directed at the Trump campaign during the 2016 election. The former is opposition research activity; the latter is a criminal justice matter.

There is absolutely nothing wrong with asking foreign heads of state or intelligen­ce officials to cooperate with an official Justice Department investigat­ion. As George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley explains, “It is not uncommon for an attorney general, or even a president, to ask foreign leaders to assist with ongoing investigat­ions. Such calls can shortcut bureaucrat­ic red tape, particular­ly if the evidence is held, as in this case, by national security or justice officials.”

Americans support the Durham probe. For two years, they were told by Trump’s opponents that the president was “working on behalf of the Russians” and had committed “treasonous” acts that were of “a size and scope probably beyond Watergate.” Those were serious accusation­s, and Americans took them seriously. They waited for special counsel Robert Mueller to tell them whether the president had indeed betrayed the country.

Then Mueller issued his report, and they found out that none of it was true. They understand­ably wanted answers. How did it come to pass that our government was paralyzed for two years and spent tens of millions of their tax dollars, chasing a TrumpRussi­a collusion conspiracy theory? A Harvard CAPS-Harris Poll following the Mueller report’s public release found that 53% of Americans said that “bias against President Trump in the FBI played a role in launching investigat­ions against him,” and 62% supported appointing a special counsel to investigat­e the investigat­ion of

Trump.

Instead of a special counsel, Barr appointed Durham, a career prosecutor, to lead the investigat­ion that Americans demanded. Durham is a man of unimpeacha­ble character who was appointed by Obama administra­tion Attorney General Eric Holder to investigat­e the CIA’s terrorist interrogat­ion program. At the conclusion of that probe, Holder praised Durham for working “tirelessly to conduct an extraordin­arily thorough and complete” investigat­ion.

Now Barr has asked Durham to bring the same tireless profession­alism to his investigat­ion into the origins of the Mueller probe. But suddenly, all those who were so eager to find out what happened in 2016 when they thought Mueller would reveal that Trump conspired with the Russians have lost interest. The same people who were outraged at Trump’s efforts to discredit the Mueller probe are now doing the exact same thing to the Durham probe. Back then, Democrats insisted Trump stop criticizin­g the investigat­ion and they lead.” Now they need to heed their own advice: Stop criticizin­g the investigat­ion. Let Durham follow the facts wherever they lead.

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